I was wondering if anyone knew the acceptance rates for the competitive M. Arch programs in the US? Not the acceptance rate for the entire graduate architecture school, just the M. Arch program. More specifically schools like Berkeley, UVA, UCLA, GSD, GSAPP, Yale, UT Austin, etc.
I was accepted to most of these over a decade ago and graduated from Berkeley. Just curious if anyone knew where to find that type of data, especially since COVID had quite the influence on graduate admissions nationwide.
Non Sequitur
Apr 6, 23 2:09 pm
How long did it take you to pay back student loans?
Chad Miller
Apr 6, 23 2:39 pm
I too want to know this.
WestCoastArchitect
Apr 6, 23 2:41 pm
I didn’t take out any loans
Chad Miller
Apr 6, 23 2:51 pm
Scholarships, family money, a high paying part time job?
As to your original question:
Contact those schools architecture departments directly and they should be able to provide you with the data.
Good luck with your research!
WestCoastArchitect
Apr 6, 23 3:07 pm
Scholarship and fortunate enough to have family money, plus Berkeley was rather affordable with in-state tuition so it was pretty manageable
I was wondering if anyone knew the acceptance rates for the competitive M. Arch programs in the US? Not the acceptance rate for the entire graduate architecture school, just the M. Arch program. More specifically schools like Berkeley, UVA, UCLA, GSD, GSAPP, Yale, UT Austin, etc.
I was accepted to most of these over a decade ago and graduated from Berkeley. Just curious if anyone knew where to find that type of data, especially since COVID had quite the influence on graduate admissions nationwide.
How long did it take you to pay back student loans?
I too want to know this.
I didn’t take out any loans
Scholarships, family money, a high paying part time job?
As to your original question:
Contact those schools architecture departments directly and they should be able to provide you with the data.
Good luck with your research!
Scholarship and fortunate enough to have family money, plus Berkeley was rather affordable with in-state tuition so it was pretty manageable