<p>However, Stern ug> Columbia, Dartmouth, Brown, Penn SAS, and Cornell.</p>
<p>congrats dan! I hope I'll be in the same boat soon. LOL.</p>
<p>Thanks. Our scores are almost exactly the same. Best of luck.</p>
<p>Related question for jwblue: If a student applies to Steinhardt or Tisch ED, can they get accepted to GSP ? Or is GSP only for CAS applications? Secondly, if someone applies to CAS ED, but gets accepted to GSP, does the ED still hold?</p>
<p>hayden, gsp is overwhelmingly CAS applicants. I've only heard of two kids who wanted Tisch film who went to gsp and no Tisch drama kids would be referred to gsp. Also no Steinhardt. If you're referred to gsp when you apply E.D., then no it isn't binding. You can refuse the acceptance.</p>
<p>Thank you, matth.</p>
<p>theres quite a few kids from tisch in gsp this year, out of the 100ish people in the nyu 20009 myspace group, i can think of 3 off the top of my head that are gsp/tisch</p>
<p>Hayden,</p>
<p>GSP is taken mostly from CAS applicants, but not exclusively. GSP people have transferred to all schools of NYU. FYI, schools like Stern, Tisch, and School of Ed. are harder to transfer to from GSP because of the very specific course of studies students begin from freshmen year. </p>
<p>Quakerman...obviously if NYU was only CAS, Stern, and Tisch, its average stats. would be much higher, but the other schools and larger size is a factor. Also, I'd take Stern over any undergraduate business school except for Wharton.</p>
<p>BTW, nice screen name Hayden (also the name of my favorite freshman dorm at NYU).</p>
<p>I don't think you can transfer to Stern from GSP. The reason that Stern doesn't refer applicants to GSP is because the curriculum is too different. Also, when you are accepted to GSP, you are only guaranteed admission to the school you applied. So, it seems like it wouldn't be possible to transfer to Stern from GSP, right?</p>
<p>Actually Unrealfire, GSP students can transfer into Stern, but bear in mind that its very rare. In years past, a bevy of GSP students would transfer to Stern, but then the curriculum changes you refer to made it extremely hard to transfer (School of Ed. and Tisch are like this too...they have very specific requirements). Hence, now its only a small number of people who do transfer into Stern from GSP. I would presume these students take a much different curriculum from GSP students transferring into CAS so they would be up to date on Stern requirements.</p>
<p>I don't think those people that answer questions on the admissions b/b know what they're talking about half the time. A month before that question you linked was answered, the same question was answered that they no longer refer any Stern applicants to gsp.</p>
<p>weird...can you say CAS? or do you have to say C-A-S
this may sound stupid, but I said CAS, as one word, and my NYU friend corrected me saying that its C-A-S, and should not be said as a word, but spelled out. What the?</p>
<p>me and my friends call it cas, saying c-a-s just sounds really pretentious and dumb</p>
<p>yeah! that's what I said, but he said that it's actually pronounced c-a-s...I still don't see the friggin difference.</p>
<p>Nobody every says "CAS".</p>
<p>cas or c-a-s, what's the diff?</p>
<p>If you were to say cas to me before I read this thread, I probably wouldn't (at least at first) know what you were talking about without the context. "Cas? Where's Cas?"</p>
<p>I think I read that the middle 50% was 1210-1410.</p>
<p>The middle 50% is 1300-1450. This is for current freshmen. NYU gets more competitive every year so some of the things you hear or read about could be old. </p>
<p>Here is source of the middle 50% being 1300-1450: </p>
<p><a href="http://admissions.nyu.edu/before/%5B/url%5D">http://admissions.nyu.edu/before/</a></p>
<p>Princeton Review lists NYU's average SAT as 1352.</p>