Which public meds welcome OOS students w/o state agreements?

<p>

Let me help. See, 1% are OOS, 7% are IS, and 92% are OOTW (out of this world ;)).</p>

<p>Curm, are you prejudiced?
M2CK- I think he meant that there are a disproportionate amount of IS admits despite it being a private school, guessing the 1% OOS was a typo?</p>

<p>No, ma’am. Just the facts. ;)</p>

<p>My interpretation is that he meant that Y has a 1% acceptance rate for OOS applicants and a 7% acceptance rate for CT residents. Does that make any sense, is their overall acceptance rate 5% or less??</p>

<p>Although I like curm’s definition better.</p>

<p>My 2005 MSAR has interview and matriculant data, but not admissions data. But Connecticut residents that year had an interview rate of 83/171 (49%) and eventually netted 8 matriculants. Out-of-staters had 693/3955 interviewed (17.5%) and eventually netted 86 matriculants.</p>

<p>

I don’t know if that data has been made public yet (MSAR will have the data for accepted students from this past cycle, but not matriculants - US News’ data will be a couple years old) but that’s what our class was told. Basically, UVa is as private as a public school can get, so they’re not very strict about having mostly IS students.</p>

<p>I don’t think DC students get residency, but I might be wrong. However, as BDM said, very few people are actually from DC.</p>