Showing posts with label Study in the US. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Study in the US. Show all posts

Thursday 9 July 2015

Northwestern University



 

18. Northwestern University 
Evanston, IL 

Acceptance Rate: 15.3% 
SAT/ACT 25th Percentile: SAT 2060; ACT 31 
SAT/ACT 75th Percentile: SAT 2310; ACT 34 

In 1853, the founders of Northwestern University purchased 379 acres of land and, two years later, opened its doors to ten students taught by two faculty members. Over 160 years later, the University has about 21,000 students across its 12 schools and three campuses.

Swarthmore College


 

Swarthmore College 
Swarthmore, PA 

Acceptance Rate: 14.3% 
SAT/ACT 25th Percentile: SAT 2030; ACT 30 
SAT/ACT 75th Percentile: SAT 2320; ACT 33 

Swarthmore is named after Swarthmoor Hall, a 17th-century Elizabethan manor house in England that served as the center of the early Quaker movement. In 1863, Swarthmore College was established for the education of Quaker children. Now nonsectarian, the College has over 40 courses of study and over 1,500 students. 
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Rice University



Rice University
 
Houston, TX  

Acceptance Rate: 16.7% 
SAT/ACT 25th Percentile: SAT 2020; ACT 30 
SAT/ACT 75th Percentile: SAT 2290; ACT 34 

In 1891, William Marsh Rice, a businessman who made his fortune chartered the William Marsh Rice Institute for the Advancement of Literature, Science, and Art.  The school's colors of blue and grey, despite not being chosen by Rice, are believed to be based on the fact that he made his fortune trading with both the North (blue) and South (grey) during the Civil War.
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Bowdoin College



 

 Bowdoin College 
Brunswick, ME  

Acceptance Rate: 15.0% 
SAT/ACT 25th Percentile: SAT 1970; ACT 29 
SAT/ACT 75th Percentile: SAT 2250; ACT 32 

In 1802, Bowdoin held its first classes for eight students urged by the College's president to work "for the common good." Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote her bestselling abolitionist novel and one of the most influential books of all time, Uncle Tom's Cabin, on Bowdoin's campus, where her husband was an alumnus and a professor of theology.

Tuesday 7 July 2015

Western Washington University

About Western Washington University

Western Washington University is a nationally recognized dynamic, innovative, and challenging public university that welcomes students from around the world. For the past 16 years, U.S. News and World Report has ranked Western the #1 regional public university in the Pacific Northwest.
Western Washington University is a nationally recognized dynamic, innovative, and challenging public university that welcomes students from around the world. For the past 16 years, U.S. News and World Report has ranked Western the #1 regional public university in the Pacific Northwest.
There are over 160 programs of study at Western Washington University, with both undergraduate and graduate options available. All are of an exceptionally high quality. International students may enroll at Western through general admission, conditional admission, as an exchange student offered through International Student and Scholar Services, or in non-credit English language courses offered through the Intensive English Program in preparation for applying to a degree program.
Many international students transfer to Western after earning an associate degree from a Washington state community college; Western offers conditional admission for students from many community colleges in Washington State.
Western's Graduate School programs also attract a number of international students. Currently, Western's student body includes international students from 35 countries.
Our 15,000 student campus is located in the city of Bellingham, Washington, population 82,000. In addition to our excellent academic reputation, affordable tuition, and welcoming size, our proximity to Seattle, Washington and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada is one of the primary reasons students choose Western. Bellingham offers small town benefits – friendliness, safety, and convenience – as well as many of the cultural opportunities of a larger city. Bellingham is also a hub of outdoor activity, with easy access to snowboarding, skiing, mountain biking, hiking and sailing. National magazines such as Forbes, Money, National Geographic Adventure, Outside, Organic Style, Paddler, and Mountain Bike have singled Bellingham out as one of the U.S.A.'s best small cities.

University of Maine - Pathway Program

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