Anyone want to explain this school?

<p>Apparently, it accepts people who score as low as a 4 on the ACT…but has a 67% acceptance rate. Who could possibly be getting rejected?</p>

<p><a href=“http://apps.collegeboard.com/search/CollegeDetail.jsp?collegeId=4259&profileId=6[/url]”>http://apps.collegeboard.com/search/CollegeDetail.jsp?collegeId=4259&profileId=6&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>people who applied there to study anthropology :P</p>

<p>*</p>

<pre><code>* 2% Asian/Pacific Islander

  • 37% Black/Non-Hispanic
  • 43% White/Non-Hispanic
  • 17% Race/ethnicity unreported
    </code></pre>

<p>The Hispanics ;)</p>

<p>Joking, of course</p>

<p>If the middle 50% is 4-9, that means some people scored below 4. That’s crazy, but this school probably just considers hands-on experience more than standardized testing, and prospective students know that so they don’t really care about what they get on the ACT.</p>

<p>What the crap? LOL</p>

<p>^^my thoughts exactly o_O</p>

<p>I guess first of all, I’d check other sources to see if this info is correct. Maybe misprint, or incomplete? If accurate, I’d be sure to stay out of the Jewish Hospital sponsoring these people!</p>

<p>more importantly…how does one score a 4 on the ACT? I read in a prep book that you could answer B on every question and still score a 12…</p>

<p>has to be a mistake</p>

<p>maybe they answered A? haha</p>

<p>Its gotta be a mistake. it happens.</p>

<p>Haha, I looked it up. Undergrad admission criteria: “A minimum ACT composite score of 21 or SAT combined verbal and math score of 1,000”</p>

<p>24-29 would make more sense than 4-9.</p>

<p>Its published average ACT score is 26, meaning CB has an error. It is affiliated with University College of Washington University in St. Louis and students also take classes there. University College is Wash U’s adult education college.</p>

<p>thanx to everyone posting after me (post # 7)for confirming my thought. It just sounded too far fetched to be true.</p>

<p>Small and addled minds with plenty of free time on their hands.</p>