Which colleges does the students of your school attend?

<p>A lot of kids from my school end up at Umich, Northwestern, MSU, and UPenn although I’m not sure about this year yet</p>

<p>Class size of about 150/class. 100% graduation, 100% to colleges. Our top feeders, in order:</p>

<ol>
<li>UC Berkeley</li>
<li>USC</li>
<li>Stanford</li>
</ol>

<p>We usually have about 7-10 Stanford/year, and about 3-6 at each Ivy. And then a few to round out the other top 20 schools. Nobody goes to community college; the “worst” schools people go to would probably be CSUs.</p>

<p>VCU, UVA, Va Tech, George Mason, JMU, CNU, William and Mary, Georgetown, American, GW. </p>

<p>We occasionally get a top college/Ivy or 2. This year it was Cornell and Carnegie Mellon.</p>

<p>Most kids go to one of the following schools.</p>

<ul>
<li>Alaska-Anchorage</li>
<li>Alaska-Fairbanks</li>
<li>U of Washington/Washington State</li>
<li>U of Oregon/Oregon State</li>
<li>Boise State/U of Idaho</li>
</ul>

<p>I’d say 10% go to Michigan
15% go to Michigan State
Probably 25% go to some other college in Michigan (we’re a public school in Michigan)</p>

<p>3 people got into Stanford last year
I think there also was a Princeton, MIT, and Brown, couple Northwestern, etc. can’t remember.</p>

<p>Our school is split about 70-30 between PSU and UPenn. Many of those in the upper portion of our class apply to UPenn along with some other ivies/top schools (cmu, duke, hyp, columbia, mit, etc.). A ton of kids go to PSU though (I don’t have the exact number, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it was around 50%).</p>

<p>Most of the people in my area(Washington) apply to University of Washington, UC Berkeley or Washington State.
Some go to Western, or Gonzaga.
The rest go to community college.
We don’t really have too many looking at any elite schools besides a small few.</p>

<p>my school used to send a couple of kids to UPenn each year consistently.
but most of the graduates go to local schools like Boston University</p>

<p>Most of the Washington state schools. A lot of kids just go to the local CC. We only send a handful to UW each year, but a lot end up at WSU. The most popular OOS schools are probably Montana State and BYU (Idaho and Utah)</p>

<p>90% Go to either UGA, Mercer, or Auburn the other 10% range from things like University of West GA, Kennesaw State, Georgia State, Alabama…we had a girl get accepted into several Ivys a few years ago but didn’t go because she was rebelling against her parents (she had an Asian tiger mom).</p>

<p>LSU, University of Louisiana in Lafayette, or Baton Rouge community college. Mostly LSU or BRCC though.</p>

<p>At my Small-mid size fairly competitive public school, Of those that go to college about 40% go to community college, another 40% end up at state schools, 15% end up at other schools in other states, and some liberal arts colleges, 3% end up at rather elite liberal arts colleges, and the last 2% end up at ivies, we had one to harvard last year, but every year most are to cornell and brown, with occassionally one to columbia or Upenn</p>

<p>SUNY, SUNY, SUNY. Binghamton is one of the most popular, but a lot of people every year also go to Stony Brook (I live on Long Island), Buffalo, and Albany. Oneonta and Geneseo are also popular choices.</p>

<p>For OOS, my school has sent a lot of people to Tulane, UMich, Miami FL, and GW the past few years. A lot of people go to great schools, but not too many Ivies. However the valedictorian last year went to Princeton, so that was cool.</p>

<p>I’m in a full IB diploma program within a big public school. My IB class has about 130 kids. Last year people went to Columbia, Stanford, UChicago, and like 5 people went to Duke. The majority of people go to UF, and some go to FSU. I know we’ve had people in the past go to UPenn, Harvard, Georgetown, and others.</p>

<p>Public high school in WI, 70% go to four year colleges. About 20% go to one of UW’s 2 year campuses, which don’t grant associate degrees but if you maintain a 2.0 for your two years, you’re guaranteed admission to one of wisconsin’s four year schools. It’s actually becoming more popular at my school, even among “smart” kids just because a lot of kids want to save money on gen Ed credits or don’t know what they want to do so they go there. A handful of kids go to the trade school down the road, a handful to the military and the rest enter the world of work.</p>

<p>Of the 70% to four years, I’d say it’s about a 70/30 split between lackluster state schools (UW-Oshkosh, UW-Whitewater, UW-LaCrosse, UW-Green Bay, UW-Milwaukee, and UW-Eau Claire) and somewhat decent schools. The top kids usually go to Madison, Northwestern, Purdue, Minnesota, Notre Dame etc. last year our valedictorian went to Madison, our sal went to Purdue and the kid with a perfect ACT (was ranked like 20th I think) went to Illinois- didn’t get into any Ivys. Otherwise, the popular private schools are Marquette, St. Norbert, St. Thomas in MN, Drake in IA and DePaul.</p>

<p>Our graduating classes are always pretty small, always under 200. Most guys go into the military. A lot don’t go to college, but those who do go to SUNYs. We have maybe one or two go OOS each year. Most go to schools like SUNY Potsdam or SUNY Canton, or Clarkson and St. Lawrence. Then people will go to schools like SUNY Plattsburgh, Binghamton, and Brockport.</p>

<p>We don’t really get people into Ivys. I know we’ve had people go to Yale, Princeton, and Cornell, but that was at least 10-20 years ago, if not more.</p>

<p>Our graduating class is usually around 180-215. An majority (probably about 80%) go to 4-year colleges, while about 10% go to community college, and the other 10% is military, employment, trade schools, etc. It is common for people to go to college in-state (we always have about a dozen kids go to Rutgers, a dozen to Rowan University, a dozen to The College of New Jersey) but, for the most part, most go out of state.</p>

<p>We get about 4 or 5 Ivy Leaguers among us every year. Another 4 or 5 go to non-Ivy top schools (Duke, Georgetown, etc.). The average GPA for our last graduating class was an 86 (which in our conversions to a 4-point scale is a 3.0).</p>

<p>Last year about 30% went to a community college, 10-20 people each went to Ohio, Miami, Cincinatti, or OSU. A couple to each of the LACs in-state, and the only out of states we had were one going to Duke and one to Harvard. Basically unless you’re smart enough to get the hell out of there 80% of the seniors all either go to community college or go to instate schools with their friends.</p>

<p>I go to a public school in Ohio. It’s common for people to go to Ohio State, Cleveland State, Youngstown State, Dayton, Toledo, Kent State, Hiram, Akron, Bowling Green, and various local community colleges. Quite a few people just go straight to work. Miami and Case Western are considered prestigious. I haven’t heard about too many people going to Oberlin, even though it’s nearby.
Last year someone went to University of Michigan. In the 90’s someone got into Northwestern, and someone got into Harvard around 1970.
I got the highest ACT score in the history of the school and now everyone at my school is convinced I’ll get into the Ivy League and I want to tell them to come look at this website for awhile…</p>

<p>Pretty much at least 60% of my high school goes to the local community college or works. Our valedictorians usually end up at like UF or FSU.</p>