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No, there are others with lower admit rates. For their 2008 classes, Yale and Harvard, for example, both accepted a smaller percentage of their applicants. But Stanford is very hard to get into.

I've attached a list of 2007 and 2008 admissions stats for the most competitive schools, below.

2007-02-15 03:26:16 · answer #1 · answered by RoaringMice 7 · 1 0

Stanford is certainly an outstanding university and therefore has plenty of talented applicants it can choose from. One can say of no university in the United States that it is absolutely the hardest to get into. That said, Stanford may well be the hardest to get into in a particular field, though I don't know what those fields would be: perhaps Computer Science, because some Stanford graduates have been outstanding leaders in Silicon Valley.
Let me make the point more broadly: the Stanford Business School may well be as hard to get into as Harvard's but I don't know this. MIT and Cal Tech may well be the hardest Engineering schools to get into: they are very distinguished and have made highly original contributions.
There used to be authoritative publications which ranked graduate departments at various universities: perhaps there still are. One was published by the American Council of Learned Societies. If a particular university is ranked at the very top for several years, it may well be the most difficult for admission. I would say, however, that for general quality, Stanford ranks with Harvard, Yale, and Princeton--that is not an exhaustive list by any means, or perhaps slighly (only very slightly) below them. Those universities have been around longer, and therefore enjoy an intangible mystique. Finally, Stanford has an amazing number of Nobel laureates, possibly many more than Yale and Princeton.

2007-02-15 03:30:09 · answer #2 · answered by tirumalai 4 · 0 0

I would say no, however they are certainly in the top 10 in most programs. It is really a program specific thing in the US. Stanford is better at harvard in some areas and yale is better at princeton in other areas, but they are all fine schools and nobody is going to call someone an idiot for graduating from Brown, Duke, or Northwestern. There are many fine schools in the US.

2007-02-15 05:46:33 · answer #3 · answered by Matt 2 · 0 0

scientific faculties do no longer ask or care approximately extreme college grades. commencing at community college will harm your med college application, and surgical technologies would be a waste of a few time - none of those training will circulate to a bachelors degree or count kind in the direction of the premed standards. you do no longer learn a forte like elegance surgical operation until eventually after med college (4 years) and residency (5 years), no longer in scientific college.

2016-09-29 03:44:32 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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