Retention rate is something like 93% as well. That's the number I was curious about.It looks like ramping the freshman class back to 8200 paid some dividends. Average ACT is now 30.5, and the average SAT is now 1400.
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Retention rate is something like 93% as well. That's the number I was curious about.It looks like ramping the freshman class back to 8200 paid some dividends. Average ACT is now 30.5, and the average SAT is now 1400.
30.6!It looks like ramping the freshman class back to 8200 paid some dividends. Average ACT is now 30.5, and the average SAT is now 1400.
Graduation rates are interesting. Fredo still has a slightly higher 4 year rate, but then there's a big gap in Ohio State's favor for the 6 year rate. I'd guess that's due to the fact that Ohio State still takes its role as a public university seriously and has high numbers of first generation and Pell Grant eligible students who need the extra year while Fredo is a safety school for rich kids who didn't get into their Big Ten school.Retention rate is something like 93% as well. That's the number I was curious about.
Be interested if they have commuters split out at all or if there's some other metric you can stand in for kids that work more than they are in class. (I don't know how else to say it). Other thing, more directly to the public university/land grant mission is that as much as it should be very seamless to transfer from a branch to Columbus, my sense is if you get past 3 semesters at a branch there's a good chance you waste a little time if the branch doesn't have your ultimate major. You cant transfer into some of these professional degrees like youre not missing a beat.Graduation rates are interesting. Fredo still has a slightly higher 4 year rate, but then there's a big gap in Ohio State's favor for the 6 year rate. I'd guess that's due to the fact that Ohio State still takes its role as a public university seriously and has high numbers of first generation and Pell Grant eligible students who need the extra year while Fredo is a safety school for rich kids who didn't get into their Big Ten school.
It was just absurdly stupid public policy to force the state's flagship and only AAU university into open admissions. And it certainly did no favors to those unprepared kids who showed up to be greeted by a faculty that was hellbent on weeding out the ones they didn't think should be there.Ord, at the opening meeting in the football stadium back in 1967, the Chancellor said 'look to your right, and look to your left. At graduation time, two of you won't be there'. And so it was. Not certain what the drop-out rate was, but somehow didn't include me.