<p>@sometransfer enjoyed your comments!</p>
<p>Most top schools haven’t yet announced their 2012 figures, but a few have: Harvard, Stanford, and sort of UChicago. Most likely the rate has dropped a bit at the other schools as well. So this is a combination of 2012 and 2011 transfer rates. Does anybody have 2012 figure schools for schools other than UChicago, Harvard, and Stanford?</p>
<p>Transfer Admit Rates:</p>
<p>Harvard University: 1% (15/1448)
University of Chicago: 2% (20/1000)
Stanford University: 2.2% (33/1500)
Yale University: 2.7% (29/1072)
Duke University: 2.8% (26/920)
Dartmouth College: 3.3% (28/861)
Columbia University: 5.6% (149/2660)
California Institute of Technology: 6% (9/150)
Washington University in St. Louis: 7.3% (105/1435)
Northwestern University: 8.5% (130/1521)
University of Pennsylvania: 9.7% (203/2099)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology: 9.9% (44/443)
Georgetown: 11.1% (222/1986)
Brown University: 11.2% (214/1904)
Johns Hopkins University: 11.4% (116/1018)
Carnegie Mellon University: 12%
Rice University: 20%
Cornell University: 21% (Skewed due to guaranteed transfers)
University of California - Berkeley: 22%
University of Southern California: 25%
University of California - Los Angeles: 26%
Wake Forest University: 26%
Emory University: 28%
Vanderbilt University: 31%
University of Virginia: 35%
University of Notre Dame: 40%</p>
<p>The Maroon reported UChicago accepted 20 transfer students this year. However, they didn’t mention the total number of apps, so I used last year’s number. Because of the rise in first-year applications, it’s likely that transfer applications rose as well. The College Board and Dept. of Education will release figures for most schools later this year so eventually we’ll know the full picture.</p>
<p>But this gives you a rough guide…</p>