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Data & Insights · 数据洞察

How We Read the Common Data Set for You.

Original statistical analysis of the 2024–25 Common Data Set universe — 135 institutions read line by line — turned into the handful of patterns that actually change a STEM applicant's school list.

Compiled May 2026 for the 2026–27 cycle · 135 institutions (97 universities + 38 liberal-arts colleges) · original analysis by Tian2.

1 · The self-selection bias that decides your list

Part One

This is the single most important idea in the data. At a test-required school, every admitted student submitted a score, so the published 25th–75th percentile band is the real band of the admitted class. At a test-optional school, only some admits submit — and the ones who submit are precisely those whose scores help. So the published band reflects the strong half of the class, biased upward.

Across our universe of 75 top universities, test-required schools showed a median submission rate of 52% (mean 57%); test-optional schools, a median of 31% (mean 34%). Test-required submission rates run about 1.7× higher. At elite test-optional schools the gap is sharper still — WashU showed only 29% of admits submitting an SAT, Vanderbilt 27%.

The correction

Industry research puts the gap between submitters and non-submitters at test-optional schools at 30–80 SAT points. So a published "1500–1570" where only ~30% submit hides a true admit floor closer to 1430–1470. A strong STEM applicant at the printed 25th is usually above the real median, not at the bottom of it.

The practical rule we use: at a test-optional school, submit only if a score is at or above the school's submitter 50th percentile — roughly the midpoint of the published band. Not submitting at a test-optional school is read as "the score is probably below the band," so a real score anywhere inside the band should go in.

2 · Test-required schools are transparent targets

Part Two

When a test-required (or high-submission) school shows a band, that band is honest. A 1530 means the 75th percentile of admits, not of self-selected submitters. For STEM applicants who test well, these are the most strategically legible targets. Schools with a submission rate at or above ~60% publish essentially the real class band:

High-submission, high-transparency bands (2024–25 CDS)
SchoolUS NewsSAT 25–75SubmissionMath 75th
MIT21520–157083%high
Brown131510–156061%800
Georgetown241400–154078%780
U Florida301320–147079%750
Georgia Tech321370–153077%790
FIU971070–125090%620

Several elite schools have reinstated test-required policies for recent cycles — among them MIT, Harvard, Brown, Dartmouth, JHU, UPenn, Caltech, and some Cornell colleges — and public flagships such as Georgia Tech, U Florida, and UT Austin require scores by mandate. For a student who tests well, these are where a real number is read at its real value.

3 · The STEM math gap is an advantage

Part Three

Across 89 schools with both sub-scores, the Math 75th percentile runs a median of +20 points above EBRW; STEM-leaning schools cluster at +40 to +50. For applicants from a Chinese math curriculum who reliably score 780–800, that asymmetry is structural leverage — strongest at exactly the engineering-heavy schools many STEM applicants target.

Largest Math-over-EBRW gap at the 75th percentile
SchoolEBRW 75thMath 75thGapPolicy
Wisconsin730780+50TO
NJIT710760+50TR
Georgia Tech750790+40TR
Purdue720760+40TR
UIUC750790+40TO
CMU770800+30TO
The caveat

At 17 elite schools the Math 75th is a perfect 800 — Princeton, Harvard, Stanford, MIT-tier and beyond — meaning ~25% of the class scored 800. There, an 800 is the median, not a distinguisher. The signal is saturated; the rest of the file has to carry the weight.

The implication: emphasize STEM-specialized schools where a math score is a positive signal rather than a baseline — Georgia Tech, CMU, Harvey Mudd, RPI, NJIT — and remember that rank within a major matters more than overall rank. CS at CMU, UIUC, or Georgia Tech outranks CS at most Ivies, regardless of the headline number.

4 · TOEFL is the real gate

Part Four

For an international applicant, TOEFL is usually the binding constraint — a 1500 SAT means little behind a 92 TOEFL at a school that wants 105. But the folklore of "you need a 100" is wrong on the data: across 100 schools with a hard minimum, the median is 80, not 100. The minimum is real, but lower and far more school-specific than most families assume. We map it in five tiers.

105+

Very high

Brown (105, with the dataset's highest IELTS minimum), Columbia, Northeastern, Pitzer (106).

100–104

High

The mainstream top-20 tier — UChicago, JHU, Cornell, CMU (102), Notre Dame, UCLA, Georgetown, NYU, and more.

none

Holistic, no minimum

Princeton, Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Duke, Northwestern, Dartmouth, UVA — operational threshold ~100–105, just unpublished.

90–99

Standard

WashU (90), Tufts, UNC, Lehigh, Case Western, Wake Forest, Purdue (88), RPI (88), and peers.

75–89

Accessible

All 9 UC campuses (80), U Florida (80), UT Austin & Georgia Tech & UIUC (79), CU Boulder (75) — most public flagships.

DET

A note on Duolingo

Cheaper and faster, but not universal — UT Austin, UGA, Stony Brook, and TCU do not accept it; Georgia Tech only as a supplement.

A 110+ closes this gate entirely; 100–109 opens all but the very-high tier; a 90–99 still reaches the no-minimum elites plus the standard and accessible tiers. Note the new TOEFL scale launched January 2026 — many schools publish both old and new minimums, so verify which scale applies at submission time.

5 · Building reach / match / safety by band

Part Five

These archetypes assume an applicant with TOEFL 100+, Math 780+, EBRW within the listed band, strong-but-not-extraordinary activities, and competent essays. They are a starting frame, not a prescription — every real list is tuned to the student.

SAT 1530–1600 — top 1%

  • Reach: the returning-test-required Ivies (MIT, Brown, JHU, UPenn, Caltech, Dartmouth) and the holistic HYPSM-tier.
  • Match: UChicago, Northwestern, Duke, Columbia, Vanderbilt, WashU, CMU, Rice, Notre Dame.
  • Safety: NYU, USC, Tufts, BC, Georgia Tech (STEM), Emory, BU; hard safety at U Florida and Northeastern.

SAT 1480–1530 — top 5%

  • Reach: the test-optional Ivies (Princeton, Yale, Columbia, Cornell), WashU, top-15 liberal-arts colleges, JHU.
  • Match: ranks 16–30 (UChicago, Duke, Vanderbilt, USC, BC, Tufts, NYU) and liberal-arts ranks 10–25.
  • Safety: large publics (UMich if you submit, UVA, UNC), Northeastern, Georgia Tech (STEM, where your score is real signal), Wake Forest, W&M, UMD.

SAT 1400–1480 — top 10%

  • Reach: NYU, BU, Northeastern, USC, Wake Forest, top-30 liberal-arts colleges.
  • Match: ranks 30–60 nationals (UMD, UMass, UMinnesota, GWU, RPI, Brandeis, Tulane, Lehigh, Pitt).
  • Safety: ranks 60–100 nationals (Penn State, Indiana, Clemson, Binghamton, NC State) and liberal-arts ranks 26–50.
On the UC system

All nine University of California campuses are test-blind — a perfect 1600 cannot help. There the levers are course rigor, the four Personal Insight Questions, and recalculated GPA. Apply to three to five UCs strategically rather than all nine, and consider the official Transfer Admission Guarantee path at the six campuses that offer it.

6 · How to read a Common Data Set

Worked Example · Yale

A Common Data Set has ten lettered sections (A–J), each a standardized survey question every US college answers the same way — which is the point: it makes apples-to-apples comparison possible. It is a regulatory filing, not a marketing document; when the brochure and the CDS disagree, the CDS is the one to trust. Using Yale's 2024–25 filing as the worked example, four sections carry most of the information value.

B1 + C1 — size and selectivity

Yale's undergraduate college is genuinely small — about 1,700 per class, the size of a large liberal-arts college — sitting under a graduate-heavy research university. Of 57,517 applicants, 2,227 were admitted and 1,554 enrolled: a 3.9% admit rate with a ~70% yield. Read the residency line too — Yale leaves the international breakdown blank, but unhooked international admit rates run closer to 2–3%.

C7 — the admission-factor matrix

The most important page for an applicant. Yale marks eight factors Very Important — course rigor, class rank, GPA, essay, recommendations, extracurriculars, talent/ability, and character — and rates standardized tests only "Considered" (a test-optional artifact). Crucially, level of applicant's interest is Not Considered: campus visits and opened emails do nothing. For an international applicant who cannot move geography or legacy, the essays and recommendations are the entire controllable game.

C9 — the score profile, read correctly

Yale's submitters showed an SAT composite of 1480 / 1530 / 1560 (25/50/75) — but 86% of admits submitted some test, so this band is close to the true class band, unlike a 29%-submission school. Aim for the submitter 50th (~1530) to be confident a score helps the file.

H — financial aid, the section that quietly decides

Often skipped, often the most consequential. Yale is need-blind for all applicants including internationals — one of only a handful of US schools — meets 100% of demonstrated need, and awarded an average international package of about $83,878. Only 12% of graduates borrow at all, averaging ~$7,265 total. For a family that genuinely cannot afford the ~$95k sticker, this is the number that matters more than any score band.

The 15-minute method

Read B1 + C1 (size, selectivity), then C7 (what the school values), then C9 (the band, with self-selection in mind), then H if you need aid, then I-3 (class sizes) and J (degree distribution — what the school actually is academically). Skip the bureaucratic A-sections and the definitions appendix. That captures ~80% of the value.

7 · The application calendar

Junior → Senior Year

A condensed timeline for an applicant targeting a fall entry. The dates that quietly end lists are the ones discovered late — so we hold them from the start.

Key windows, junior through senior year
WindowWhat happens
Jr. springFirst SAT and TOEFL attempts; AP exams; line up a substantive summer (real research or a project with visible output beats a brand-name camp).
SummerThe substantive activity itself; begin the Common App; open conversations with counselor and recommenders.
Aug–OctSAT / TOEFL retakes if needed; research current CDS bands; finalize a list of 8–12 with a 3-3-3 reach/match/safety split.
Nov 1–30Early Decision / Early Action deadlines (most Nov 1); UC application by Nov 30; CSS Profile for need-aware aid.
DecEarly decisions release; if admitted to a binding ED, withdraw the rest; otherwise finalize Regular Decision.
Jan–AprRD deadlines (Jan 1–15); decisions release through late March; F-1 visa interview prep.
May 1Enrollment deposit due; then SEVIS fee, F-1 interview, I-20, orientation.
Don't miss

TOEFL by November of senior year (scores valid two years); SAT by October at the latest (reporting takes 2–3 weeks); CSS Profile on the same day as the Common App; and book F-1 interview slots by April — they fill over the summer.

Blank data is not no data. A school that hides its band is telling you something too.

— The Tian2 Editors