Admission Letters were all mailed today

<p>Per USC - University of Southern California main site:</p>

<p>Record year for undergraduate admissions at USC sees an increase in applications from under-represented minorities and the East Coast of the U.S.
By James Grant</p>

<p>USC undergraduate admissions letters went into the mail today to anxious applicants from around the world and the nation. Only 21 percent of applicants will receive an offer to join the entering class for next fall. </p>

<p>USC received 35,809 applications for 2,600 places in the freshman class, representing an increase of 2,056 applications over the previous year. With this applicant pool, USC’s admission rate has dropped from 24.8 percent in 2007 to 21.0 percent in 2008. </p>

<p>USC’s applicant pool represents a highly competitive and highly diverse group of students, with very broad geographic representation. Applications this year from New York, Northern New Jersey and Long Island were up 11 percent, and those from the Washington, D.C. area were up 18 percent. At 2108, the mean composite SAT score of all admitted applicants is 18 points higher than 2007. </p>

<p>In addition, USC continues to make great strides in providing access to talented students from all backgrounds: About 20 percent of this year’s admitted applicants are under-represented minority students, and more than 10 percent of admitted students are first-generation college goers. Recruited athletes make up 1.5 percent of admitted students. </p>

<p>Overall, 53 percent of admitted students are from California, with 7 percent international students and the remainder of the admitted class coming from the other 49 states and U.S. territories. </p>

<p>“With this group of admitted students, USC has not only taken its place among the highest in academic rank, it has solidified its position as the nation’s most diverse, top-rated private university,” said USC Vice Provost for Enrollment Policy and Management Jerome A. Lucido. “These are extraordinarily talented and interesting young women and men to teach – and for each other to have as classmates and roommates.” </p>

<p>USC enrolls more under-represented minority students (African American, Hispanic and Native American) than most other private research universities in the country (3,190 as of fall 2007). Moreover, USC enrolls 17.7 percent low-income students (defined as Pell Grant eligible). Most importantly, low-income students at USC graduate at rates comparable to the overall undergraduate population. </p>

<p>USC’s Financial Aid Pledge </p>

<p>USC offers admission without regard to ability to pay, and the university meets 100 percent of the demonstrated need of on-time financial aid applicants. Almost 60 percent of USC’s undergraduate students receive some form of university aid. This represents more than 9,000 students – more than the total undergraduate population of most highly selective private research universities. </p>

<p>USC has the largest university-funded financial aid budget of any university in the country, providing more than $180 million each year of university funds to undergraduates. </p>

<p>The top 15 domestic locations of admitted students for fall 2008 include Los Angeles/Riverside/Orange County, San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose, San Diego, Greater Chicago, New York/Northern New Jersey/Long Island, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Seattle/Tacoma/Bremerton, Houston/Galveston/Brazoria, Washington/Baltimore, Greater Hawaii, Boston/Worcester/Lawrence, California Central Coast, Phoenix/Mesa, Philadelphia/Wilmington/Atlantic City and Portland/Salem.</p>

<p>Great info. Thanks!</p>

<p>You'd never know that Northern NJ was one of the top 15 domestic admitted student locations with the number of applicants who still haven't heard around here......Momma Blair where are you? Did you see this?</p>

<p>Ummm... Does this mean that if we internationals don't recieve a DHL email by today we're rejected? :(</p>

<p>poor southern new jersey gets segregated like it's a different state</p>

<p>Chinaski: Not sure why they categorized like that since the admissions officer for the whole state is the same, yet is different than the NY one.....</p>

<p>On another note, how did they review all the applications that were updated into "review" yesterday in less than 24 hours? Me thinkin rejection and me thinkin they just updated status when the letters were sent out.........</p>

<p>rodney -- i'm here -- and yes, i saw it. i guess i'm just sitting here pouting! i only wish that if my D was getting rejected, they would have let her know soon after they reviewed her application for the dec. 10 scholarship wave. this way the anxiety would have been eliminated for a lot of us and she could have had more time to think through which school she will really attend. good thing we are planning on going to that "admitted students reception" for U Miami tomorrow!</p>

<p>well -- good luck again to everyone!! it's been an interesting ride. i hope i see good news for all of you here!!!</p>

<p>Momma: My d is going to UMiami on April 6th for the reception...let us know what you think...it's not necessarily her first choice, but it was easy to plan in advance....</p>

<p>yes, I do agree that a rejection back in Feb/Beginning of March would have been alot easier...I can't believe the my d just went into review yesterday and the letters are going out today.....very bizarre....Have fun in Miami; hopefully the weather is better there than here....(anyplace south of MD has better weather right now....)</p>

<p>Since they were all mailed today, does this mean we won't hear about our decisions until Monday at the earliest?</p>

<p>rodney -- we're not going to miami tomorrow -- there is a reception for admitted students at the newark airport marriott. since we haven't been to the school at all and haven't been to any local events, we thought we'd go to see what they have to say. after the results of the mail in the next few days, and what she thinks about the presentation tomorrow, she will have to evaluate between loyola marymount in los angeles or u. miami. if she really likes miami, we will do a quick trip there just to make sure (since she's already visited loyola marymount). she has a 2nd cousin who is at miami this year (and LOVES it), so my D can do an overnight with her.</p>

<p>let me know what you think when you return from the april 6 visit. we will have to compare notes.</p>

<p>21%- Bananas</p>

<p>


</p>

<p>The press release says they were already mailed today, which means they had to be ready to go by the end of business yesterday. No reason to leave them in the office all night only to mail them today, so it stands to reason that they might have been trucked to the post office last night. It would serve USC's interests to have all those rejection letters delivered on Saturday, as Admissions officers would be out of the office and thus would not be available for the phone calls of disappointed applicants and enraged parents (it is for this reason that Stanford is sending out its emails this Friday afternoon). By Monday, they will have had a chance to cool down.</p>

<p>The East Coast applicants may have had their letters sent out on Thursday, so as to time it so that the weeping and lamentation of rejected applicants occurs on Saturday in one united chorus throughout the land .</p>

<p>Who told you that JW? Where do you get your facts</p>

<p>haha southern NJ is practically its own state</p>

<p>They "mailed" the letters on a Saturday? That would have meant a fully-staffed weekend admissions office, probably.</p>

<p>Hmmm. </p>

<p>(Why not Friday?)</p>

<p>yay hawaii was on there.and hawaii is a small state so i have shot!</p>

<p>
[quote]
They "mailed" the letters on a Saturday? That would have meant a fully-staffed weekend admissions office, probably.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Today is Friday. They mailed them today....or possibly last night.</p>

<p>South Jersey is its own state not because we want it to be, but because everyone up north gets all the good funding, the benefits of NYC within driving distance, etc. etc.</p>

<p>I hate it down here; not only does everyone think it's ONLY farms and hillbillies (and Camden) we are so backwards everyone roots for Philadelphia sports teams instead of NJ teams. </p>

<p>No idea why I'm rambling on about it in this thread, but I think it's strange that they categorized it that way :)</p>

<p>is anyone else confused? In the letter I got about scholarships it said they would be admitting approx. 7,600 freshman. Now, in the press release, it says 2,600. A typo? I hope so. Good luck to you all!!!! We'll know soon....</p>

<p>I think they let in 7,600 for 2,600 spots. If they let in only 2,600 not everyone would go and their yield would be below the freshman class size.</p>

<p>Someone correct me if I'm wrong.</p>