<p>Which is the easiest school to get into? What’s the acceptance rate to each? (I want to apply ED to CAS) Anyone have an idea of what the average ACT score is of each?</p>
<p>…If you want to apply ED to CAS… then do it. Don’t wory about other colleges… CAS is I think around like 16% acceptance rate with an ACT median of around 33.</p>
<p>[List</a> of Cornell University admissions rates](<a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cornell_University_admissions_rates]List”>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cornell_University_admissions_rates)</p>
<p>Oh man, 33 ACT? I’m a little lower than that. There goes my chances.</p>
<p>THERE IS NO “EASIEST” SCHOOL TO GET INTO. IT IS BASED ON FIT</p>
<p>for all of the thousands of questions like this that come in, please read the above. if you want to go into architecture but try to get an “easy way in” by applying and trying to get into CALS, IT WONT WORK</p>
<p>point and blank, the easiest school is the one you will fit in the best! like engineering? simple: the easiest school for you to get into is engineering. hotel, on the other hand, would be much harder.</p>
<p>Except HumEc. Woo don’t know what fit that’s for.</p>
<p>^in HumEc, there is the fashion and apparel design major, DEA, nutrition, human development, PAM, bio and society, etc. obviously if you want to go into the fashion industry, you dont apply to ILR</p>
<p>Obviously though, if you really want to go to the fashion industry, you shouldn’t really be applying to Cornell… </p>
<p>The fact is, HumEc is probably the most subpar of the colleges within Cornell.</p>
<p>just trying to supply a blatant example…</p>
<p>You know Lollerpants you seem to know so much about Humec to say it is subpar to all the other colleges. At least that is what I gathered from your cynical comments.</p>
<p>Hey, I wanted to apply to Humec. That isn’t nice.</p>
<p>No its not nice. Its very rude…especially to the people who are in HumEc</p>
<p>Yeah, I’m not seeing why you think it’s subpar. I mean, the acceptance rate may be higher than for other colleges, but that’s not a reason for it to be subpar.</p>
<p>It’s just that HumEc is not considered one of the most difficult of the colleges to get into, and the programs it offers in general aren’t known to be extremely challenging. </p>
<p>At least, that’s what I think Lollerpants meant with “subpar”.</p>
<p>I wish the people that started these threads would at least look on the SAME PAGE for their topic (god knows it’s impossible to get them to actually search the forums)</p>
<p>ananya- I do not appreciate the hostility. My thread was actually started a day before the other one and I have searched.</p>
<p>it could be just that a select group of people focused on those things apply and because their #s are low, the acceptance % is high… it doesn’t mean the quality of the students are bad or the school is bad</p>
<p>…The college used to be “Home Economics”. That’s not a bad thing or anything but comparing a lot of the majors in HumEc (HBHS, Bio & Society, etc.) to actual science based majors (Bio, Chem, Phys, etc.) is just not right. And frankly, that’s what a lot of HumEc kids think, that they’re actually in a hardcore science major when that’s just not the case.</p>
<p>For all intents and purposes I feel like they made those majors just for premed kids who did not want to major in science or did not have the proper science background cut out for premed. Because, going on a whim here, I’m pretty sure a LOT of people in those majors who enter the field in health or whatever that HumEc kids end up in (specifically the HBHS, BioSoc ones, not as much the PAM, and design ones) started out as premed, and later drop it when they can’t handle the science.</p>
<p>Yep, basically the college used to be a place where women could go get an education, and they renamed it to Human Ecology once they added a couple majors that weren’t as domestically-oriented.</p>
<p>Meh, HumEc is a fine school…I just wish they taught underwater basketweaving…:(</p>