<p>
Both remain at the top even when one accounts for the number of applications. Penn, for example, receives between 2 and 3 times as many posts per capita as Duke.</p>
<p>University Posts/Applications*10 (Posts, Applications)
University of Pennsylvania 65.7 (177,037 26,939)
Cornell University 58.1 (210,959 36,338)
Yale University 57.8 (150,285 26,003)
Princeton University 56.9 (149,408 26,247)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 56.9 (94,625 16,632)
California Institute of Technology 52.3 (25,418 4,859)
Harvard University 52.3 (159,378 30,489)
Columbia University 44.7 (116,931 26,179)
Stanford University 34.6 (110,682 32,022)
Brown University 31.2 (93,990 30,135)
Dartmouth College 30.1 (56,439 18,778)
Duke University 24.3 (65,021 26,784)</p>
<p>
I don’t see that at all. Penn gets quite a lot of love, especially for Wharton. Perhaps it’s not worshipped as much as a prospective matriculant might like, but it’s well respected on CC nevertheless.</p>
<p>From my own experience on CC, some schools do seem to be neglected. Chicago, for instance, was vastly neglected before its popularity took off and surprisingly left most of the other top universities in the dust about three years ago (most notably Northwestern). By the numbers, Dartmouth seems to be the most neglected Ivy. Penn…not so much.</p>