<p>Ughh - not THIS discussion again.</p>
<p>NU -
SAT verbal scores over 600 92%, SAT math scores over 600 94%, ACT scores over 24 96%, SAT verbal scores over 700 53%, SAT math scores over 700 63%, ACT scores over 30 69% </p>
<p>UoM -
SAT verbal scores over 600 70%, SAT math scores over 600 86%, ACT scores over 24 94%, SAT verbal scores over 700 21%, SAT math scores over 700 43%, ACT scores over 30 38% </p>
<p>Sorry - but there is quite a difference in the quality of the make-up of the 2 student bodies.</p>
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I think the data comparison which hawkette presented has little indication in presenting which is the better school between NU and UMich. For one thing, both schools fall under 2 different categories. UMich is large and public whilst NU is small and private, but none can neither say it is better than the other.
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<p>Right - one will get a top-notch education at either university since both have great faculties/facilities (tho, the advantages that NU has are smaller class sizes and actually being able to get the classes needed to graduate in 4 yrs, unlike many state schools).</p>
<p>Otoh, people do also form an opinion of a school by virtue of the quality of its student body.</p>
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According to the data you presented, UMich's student body composed of 89% in the top 10 in their high school whilst only 82% at NU. NU has higher SAT scores though. The question here is: which is reliable between high school rank/gpa and SAT scores? </p>
<p>I go for high school rank/gpa.
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<p>Actually school rank/gpa is a rather unreliable indicator since the quality of HSs and student bodies vary widely - that's a reason why Texas/UT is rethinking it's top-10% guarantee of admittance (too many top-10% HS grads have been found to need remedial classes).</p>
<p>Alex -
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Hawkette, comparing SAT ranges between state universities and private universities is like comparing salaries without taking purchasing parity and income tax levels into account. </p>
<p>1) What percentage of Northwestern's student body takes SAT prep classes vs the percentage of students at Michigan who take SAT prep classes.</p>
<p>2) How hard does the average Northwestern student prepare for the SAT vs how long does the average Michigan student prepare for the SAT.</p>
<p>3) What percentage of SAT-taking students at Northwestern sit for the SAT twice or three times vs the percentage of SAT-taking students at Michigan who sit for the SAT twice or three times.
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<p>And what % of the top scoring UoM students do the same in contrast to the lower scoring UoM students? </p>
<p>And what about the students at Harvard or Stanford?</p>
<p>Plus, you make it seem like not preparing for an important test (don't need to take a prep course - doing practice exams and reading a test prep book does just as well) is somehow something to be proud of - would you say the same if these students didn't take the time to prep well for an exam in Calculus?</p>
<p>"How hard does the average Northwestern student prepare for the SAT vs how long does the average Michigan student prepare for the SAT."</p>
<p>As an employer - such a statement would bode well for the NU grad.</p>
<p>And how about the even bigger contrast in ACT scores - which tests more on subject matter studied in HS?</p>
<p>ACT scores over 30 - 69% for NU as opposed to 38% for UoM.</p>