Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Texas House Bill 588, commonly referred to as the "Top 10% Rule", is a Texas law passed in 1997. It was signed into law by then governor George W. Bush on May 20, 1997. The law guarantees Texas students who graduated in the top ten percent of their high school class automatic admission to all state-funded universities.
The University of Texas School of Law was founded in 1883. [8] Prior to the Civil Rights Movement, the school was limited to white students, but the school's admissions policies were challenged from two different directions in high-profile 20th century federal court cases that were important to the long struggle over segregation, integration, and diversity in American education.
Chapman University School of Law: 2.8 (first-year courses) 3.0 (all other courses) [25] Charleston School of Law: 2.3 to 2.7 (first-year courses) [26] Chicago-Kent College of Law: 3.0 (mandatory for all required courses except legal writing; recommended for most other courses) [27] University of Cincinnati College of Law: 3.0 in first-year ...
UNC-Chapel Hill, North Carolina’s most selective public college, admitted less than 17% of applicants for last fall’s first-year class. Now admissions officials may have to change how they ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The University of California has an arrangement to accept many students conditionally to one of its 10 undergraduate campuses if students first complete two years of community college; the plan extended these so-called "provisional offers of admission" to 12,700 students in the year 2000 (before the tenth campus opened). [61]
During the first few months (September to December) of the final year of school or sixth form college (age 17/18) or after having left school, applicants register on the UCAS website and select five courses at higher education institutes (fewer choices are permitted for the more competitive subjects such as medicine and veterinary medicine).
The number of first-time freshmen entering college that fall was 2.90 million, including students at four-year public (1.29 million) and private (0.59 million) institutions, as well as two-year public (0.95 million) and private (0.05 million) colleges.