IB Scores summary
Dear London School of Economics,
May I please request the following information for the entry years of 2021, 2022, 2023 for the courses : BSc Economics, BSc Mathematics and Economics, BSc Mathematics with Economics, BSc Econometrics and Mathematical Economics
1) Number of applicants for each of the provided courses
2) Number of offers given for each of the provided courses
3)Of those applications how many were made by students from the United States of America and how many offers were given to students from the United States of America
3) Average IB predicted score for applicants who receive an offer
4) What percentage of offers were made to applicants who had 3 Higher Level courses compared to 4 Higher Level courses in the IB Diploma
Yours faithfully,
Bob Jones
Thank you for your email. Please consider this as confirmation that your
request has been received and will be processed in line with statutory
deadlines. If there are any delays in responding we will let you know.
Dear Bob,
Further to your recent FoI request, the Schools response is provided below:
Please see attached and this link: https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/l...
1. There are no offer holders for BSc Econometrics and Mathematical Economics in 2021, 2022, 2023, therefore the Q3 sheet shows 0 against the table for that programme.
2. The percentages for Q4 as based on the number of offer holders with an IB predicted grade against the number of those that had 3 Higher Level IB courses or 4 Higher Level IB courses
If you think that the information provided does not meet your request, contact Rachael Maguire at [email address] or write to Louise Nadal, School Secretary, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE. We will then review the response to your request and get back to you within 20 working days. You can also contact the Information Commissioner's Office http://www.ico.gov.uk/, though they expect the internal review to be carried out before receiving a complaint directly.
The provision of information by the LSE under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 does not imply a right to copy, reproduce publish or otherwise use such information. Copying or reproducing such information in any way either in whole or in part without prior written consent may be an infringement of copyright or other intellectual property right belonging to the LSE or a third party.
Yours sincerely,
The Information Rights Team
London School of Economics
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