Stuyvesant and Bronx High School Matriculants

Stuyvesant High School Classes of 2016-2019 Matriculations

  1. NYU - 305
  2. SUNY, Stony Brook - 277
  3. CUNY, Hunter - 205
  4. SUNY, Binghamton - 199
  5. Cornell - 193
  6. CUNY, Baruch - 135
  7. UChicago - 100
  8. SUNY, Buffalo - 89
  9. Boston U - 84
  10. Fordham - 70
  11. Michigan* - 66 to 70
  12. Carnegie Mellon - 64
  13. Rensselaer Polytechnic - 52
  14. St. Johns - 51
  15. MIT - 42
  16. Harvard - 41
  17. CUNY, City* - 38 to 42
  18. RIT - 37
  19. Yale - 35
  20. Princeton - 34
    Columbia - 16
    Penn* <23
    Brown* <21
    Stanford* <20
    Dartmouth* <16

Stuyvesant only released exact figures for each year for schools that had more than 5 enrollees in a given year. It also told if a school had 0 enrollees in a given year. Schools with an * indicates that they had between 1 to 5 enrollees in a given year (so the total for four years indicates the maximum number of matriculants for schools with low enrollment.) Figures for schools without an asterisk are the exact number of matriculants.

Bronx High School of Science Classes of 2016-2019

  1. SUNY, Stony Brook - 291
  2. NYU - 200
  3. Michigan - 174
  4. CUNY, Baruch - 170
  5. SUNY, Bighamton - 150
  6. CUNY, Hunter - 143
  7. Cornell - 140
  8. St. Johns - 107
  9. Boston U - 77
  10. CUNY, City - 71
  11. SUNY, Buffalo - 70
  12. Fordham - 60
  13. UChicago - 55
  14. RIT - 42
  15. Carnegie Mellon - 38
  16. MIT - 36
    Columbia - 12
    Princeton* <23
    Harvard* <22
    Yale* <21
    Stanford* <15

Bronx HS only released exact figures for each year for schools that had more than 5 enrollees in a given year. It also told if a school had 0 enrollees in a given year. Schools with an * indicates that they had between 1 to 5 enrollees in a given year (so the total for four years indicates the maximum number of matriculants for schools with low enrollment.) Figures for schools without an asterisk are the exact number of matriculants.

The UChicago Dean of Admissions, Dean Nondorf, is the AO for Stuy.

What is interesting to me is that, aside from Stanford, the only colleges that were not in the East Coast on that list are Michigan and UChicago.

Which explains why UChicago has many more matriculants than other colleges on the list with comparable admission rates.

What in interesting to me are the colleges that are missing from the list, like JHU. They have Boston U, but not Brandeis, Tufts, or Northeastern. The have RIT and RPI, but not U Rochester.

There are also no universities which are a bit more south, like Duke, Georgetown, or Vanderbilt. They have Michigan, so OOS publics are there, but not UVA, W&M, or UNC.

It’s also interesting that no LAC is very popular.

As usual, nobody in the East Coast show any love for Rutgers…