Acceptance rate for Penn's Class of 2015 drops to 12.3%

<p>Regular Decision acceptance rate drops to 9.5%

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Admissions rate drops to 12.3 percent</p>

<p>by Seth Zweifler | Wednesday, March 30, 2011 at 5:00 pm</p>

<p>Regular decision admissions at Penn has officially joined the single-digit club.</p>

<p>On Wednesday, the Admissions Office reported that 9.5 percent of regular decision applicants were admitted to the Class of 2015, down from 11.4 percent last year. This marks the first time that the University’s regular decision acceptance rate has dipped below the 10-percent mark.</p>

<p>Penn’s overall acceptance rate is 12.3 percent, down from 14.2 percent last year. This number also marks a record low, Dean of Admissions Eric Furda said.</p>

<p>This admissions cycle, the University admitted a total of 3,880 of 31,659 students, Furda said. Last year, 26,938 students applied and 3,830 were accepted.</p>

<p>The target enrollment across all four undergraduate schools is 2,420 students. Overall, this is the most selective year ever for Penn.</p>

<p>“We had a great amount of breadth and depth to choose from in our applicant pool,” Furda said. “I think it’s going to strike people when they see how many percentage points came off the admit rate.”</p>

<p>Overall applications to the Class of 2015 rose by 18 percent.</p>

<p>Because class sizes remain approximately the same from year to year, it was only natural for Penn’s acceptance rate to drop by as much as it did, Furda said.</p>

<p>For Furda, this year’s jump in applications allowed the Admissions Office to “better shape the incoming class,” especially in terms of academic potential “across a variety of fields.”</p>

<p>The University was able to admit more students than ever before in traditionally under-enrolled majors like physics and mathematics, he said.</p>

<p>Compared to last year, minority representation is down among this year’s prospective class. Overall, self-identified minority students — defined by the Admissions Office as Asian, black, Latino and American Indian — make up 44 percent of the admitted class, down from 49 percent last year, which also included native Hawaiians.</p>

<p>1989 Graduate School of Education alumnus Steven Goodman, an educational consultant at Top Colleges, said he was not expecting to see Penn’s diversity numbers drop by as much as 5 percent.</p>

<p>“It’s surprising because Penn has a very well-oiled recruiting process for minority students,” he said. “Penn takes minority recruitment very seriously, and they’re good at it.”</p>

<p>Like last year, members of the Class of 2015 come from all 50 states and Puerto Rico. International students make up 11 percent of the prospective class.</p>

<p>Compared with last year’s 50-50 male-female ratio, the newly-admitted class consists of 51 percent males and 49 percent females.</p>

<p>All Ivy League schools released admissions decisions at 5 p.m. Wednesday. Columbia, Harvard, Princeton and Yale universities saw record-low acceptance rates, coming in at 6.9 percent, 6.2 percent, 8.39 percent and 7.35 percent, respectively.</p>

<p>On the whole, Ann Selvitelli, director of college counseling at Suffield Academy in Suffield, Conn., said the numbers did not surprise her.</p>

<p>“You hope things will die down eventually, but there’s really no way to predict whether a student will be accepted to an Ivy League school anymore,” Selvitelli, a 1995 Graduate School of Education alumna, said.</p>

<p>Goodman agreed, adding that students in future years will probably continue to apply to greater numbers of schools “as the only rational response to the low [acceptance] rates.”</p>

<p>Admitted students said Penn’s record-low numbers made them feel particularly pleased with their decisions.</p>

<p>“It’s an honor to know that Penn picked me out of such a small number,” said Selena Sudol, a senior at Absegami High School in Galloway, N.J., who was admitted to the School of Nursing. Sudol, who is currently considering offers from Penn and Villanova University, added that “there was lots of yelling [when I found out].”</p>

<p>“I’m surprised that I still have my voice after seeing my decision,” said Grace Zhang, a senior at Bentonville High School in Bentonville, Ark., who was admitted to the Wharton School. “Penn is definitely a great fit for me.”

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<p>Admissions</a> rate drops to 12.3 percent | The Daily Pennsylvanian</p>

<p>mmmm single digits here we come!</p>

<p>My guess is that so many more people are applying to these top tiered schools just to give it a shot. And with the common app and online processing it’s a lot easier to apply to 10 different schools. People get scared when they hear the admit rates are dropping and they think it’s so much more competitive but I don’t think the standards are changing that much. It’s just the applicant pool that is flooding like crazy…</p>

<p>^ And that becomes, in effect, a self-fulfilling prophecy: lower admit rates cause more students to apply to more schools causing even lower admit rates, almost ad infinitum.</p>

<p>Added to this is that many of the top schools have significantly enhanced their financial aid, and have expanded the recruiting of their applicant pools in terms of financial and cultural background, and geographically. In particular, Penn has made a concerted effort to publicize its enhanced financial aid to an increasing number of potential applicants from lower-income families. Also, Penn now gets more applicants from California than from any other state, and it has substantially increased recruiting efforts–including visits by admissions officers–to areas in the US outside of the northeast, as well as to places like India and China (an incredible wealth of potential applicants only beginning to be tapped).</p>

<p>Moreover, in several recent Daily Pennsylvanian articles, Dean Furda has indicated an enhanced focus on increasing yield (including new outreach efforts specifically targeted at various groups of admitted applicants) which, if successful, could see the admit rate continue to fall precipitously in the face of increasing numbers of applicants.</p>

<p>I too, believe, online applications and the economic recession are to blame. I’ll be honest here: I only applied to places where I could get close to a full ride. I had a friend who applied to 9 schools. He was turned down by every single one - except the last one to release decisions, which offered him about 80% financial aid. </p>

<p>I do think it’s getting harder to get to certain schools, but I think this will make waitlists more of a REAL waitlist and less of an “oh, we kinda liked you.” Students are applying everywhere and probably getting into at least a couple of their choices…so that’ll end up dropping the % of students who actually enroll, hopefully leaving room for waitlistees.</p>