Colleges Reject Record Numbers

<p>I found this article on AOL today. I thought it might be an interesting thread.</p>

<p><a href="http://jobs.aol.com/article/onlinecampus/_a/colleges-reject-record-numbers/20070413135609990001?ncid=AOLCOMMjobsDYNLprim0002%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://jobs.aol.com/article/onlinecampus/_a/colleges-reject-record-numbers/20070413135609990001?ncid=AOLCOMMjobsDYNLprim0002&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Updated:2007-04-25 14:50:45
Colleges Reject Record Numbers</p>

<p>By ANJALI ATHAVALEY,
From The Wall Street Journal Online</p>

<p>This year's college-admissions competition is turning out to be more brutal than ever -- and not just for students who applied to elite universities.</p>

<p>A number of top-tier state schools and smaller liberal arts colleges say they received more applications this year from well-qualified students -- and consequently are turning down a higher percentage of them.</p>

<p>The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill received 20,017 applications, up from 19,736 last year. The state school's acceptance rate fell to 33.3 percent from 34.1 percent. At Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, 4,624 students applied, up 8 percent, yet it accepted 1,348, down from 1,395 last year, to prevent overenrollment. Even schools that admit the vast majority of applicants are becoming more selective. Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, saw a record 15,836 applicants this year, up from 15,498 the year before; it accepted 73 percent of them, down from 78 percent last year.</p>

<p>"Students are being more intelligent about what their options are when getting into school, and they are looking in the next tier now," says Jennifer Delahunty Britz, Kenyon's dean of admissions and financial aid. "Schools that did not used to be on the radar of talented students are now on the radar."</p>

<p>Many Ivy League universities also drew record numbers of applicants and consequently admitted students at lower rates. The University of Pennsylvania saw applications rise 11 percent over the last year to a record 22,634, while its acceptance rate fell to 15 percent from about 17 percent last year. "The talent of students in the pool was so exceptional that we had difficulty making choices," says Lee Stetson, dean of admissions at the Philadelphia school.</p>

<p>More From WSJ.com
Search Engines Seek to Get Inside Your HeadHouse Prices Slide as Property Glut GrowsHow to Find a Good DoctorA Hidden Heart Risk for KidsRead the Fine Print on Student LoansDartmouth College had a record 14,176 applications, up 2 percent from last year. It accepted 2,165, or 15 percent -- its lowest acceptance rate in history. Harvard University drew a record 22,955 applicants and accepted a record low 9 percent. At Stanford University, the number of applications rose 7 percent to 23,956. It accepted 10.3 percent, down from 10.9 percent last year.</p>

<p>Several factors are fueling the rise in applications. One is population trends: The number of students graduating from high school has risen each year since the 1995-96 school year, according to the National Association for College Admission Counseling. The U.S. Department of Education predicts that the trend will continue until at least 2013.</p>

<p>Another is the growth in international students. At UNC-Chapel Hill, for instance, recruiters went abroad for the first time this year, making trips to Shanghai and other Asian cities to promote the college. UNC had 736 foreign nationals apply this year, up from 590 last year. The university admitted 167 of them, up from about 125 a year ago.</p>

<p>A Higher Bar
Here's a look at some of the nation's colleges and this year's admissions rates: </p>

<p>Harvard University 9%
Princeton University 10
Yale University 10
Stanford University 10
University of Pennsylvania 15
Dartmouth College 15
Pomona College 16
Williams College 17
Georgetown University 20
Cornell University 21
Kenyon College 29
Bucknell University 30
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill 33
University of Chicago 35
University of Michigan* 42 </p>

<p>*Rolling admission not yet complete. </p>

<p>A third is the growing use of the Common Application, a form that can be completed online and sent to a number of admissions offices far more easily than paper-based applications. More than 300 schools accept it.</p>

<p>The Common Application has "made it much easier for people to file 10, 15, 20 applications," says Charles Deacon, dean of undergraduate admissions at Georgetown University. Georgetown doesn't take the Common Application to try to hold down its number of applicants, he says. Still, the Washington, D.C., university saw applications rise to 16,198 from 15,067 last year. It accepted 20 percent of them, down from 22 percent a year ago.</p>

<p>To be sure, not all of the most-selective colleges saw a rise in applicants. Yale University's applications fell to 19,323 from 21,101 last year. Although there has been speculation that Yale's low acceptance rate last year caused fewer students to apply this year, the dean of admissions has said the decline was due to a random fluctuation, says Yale spokesman Tom Conroy.</p>

<p>Explore the Options
Increase your chances of getting in and getting ahead. Explore e-learning programs:</p>

<p>University of Phoenix
Kaplan University
AIU Online
Walden University
Capella University
View All Schools
Generally, though, college officials agree it has become more difficult to get into selective schools. As a result, some high school counselors are encouraging students to be more realistic in deciding where to apply. "It's more competitive every year," says Shirley Bloomquist, a private counselor in Great Falls, Va. "I'm seeing more parents and students look at safety schools."</p>

<p>Ms. Bloomquist says she now emphasizes that students should prepare for their "likely" schools, those where they have a good shot, rather than their "reach" schools. She also encourages high schoolers to start looking at colleges during their sophomore year rather than spring of junior year, when most begin the process. That gives them more time to find additional schools that may not be their top choices but still would be desirable.</p>

<p>Even high school seniors with exceptional grades are being careful with their expectations. Last year, "I had some really smart friends who applied to some schools they didn't get into," says James Newman, 17, the salutatorian at Lamar High School in Houston. He has a 4.82 grade point average (boosted above 4.0 by International Baccalaureate courses) and scored a 2210 on his SAT out of 2400. He is active in his church youth group and has been an Eagle Scout, vice president of the National Spanish Honor Society and vice president of the school choir.</p>

<p>Mr. Newman applied to Princeton University, Stanford, Middlebury College, Duke University, Davidson College in North Carolina and the University of Texas at Austin. But he learned from his friends' experiences. "I tried not to have a definite first choice," he says. "I thought it's likely I'd get rejected because it's so competitive." He was turned down by Princeton, wait-listed at Stanford and accepted by his other choices. He says he is now leaning toward Duke -- he's not optimistic about getting into Stanford.</p>

<p>Indeed, college officials warn they may not take many students from their wait-lists this year. "We have not gone to the wait-list for two years, and we would like to," says Tom Parker, dean of admissions and financial aid at Amherst College. Wait-lists allow colleges to adjust their freshman class if there is a shortage of students with particular strengths and characteristics who plan to attend.</p>

<p>Amherst currently has 1,450 students on its wait-list. Mr. Parker expects fewer than half to stay on it. Of those who do, Amherst hopes to accept 25 students.</p>

<p>In the past few years, colleges -- even top-level state schools -- have seen a higher-than-expected yield, or percentage of students admitted who end up attending. That means there are fewer spaces for wait-listed students.</p>

<p>The greater competition has made the admissions process increasingly frustrating for students, including those who don't apply to elite schools. Corey King, a senior at Urbana High School in Ijamsville, Md., who wants to study music, heard from his first choice, Berklee College of Music in Boston, via email last week. "I actually injured my hand punching my door when I found out I didn't get in," he says.</p>

<p>Mr. King, who has a 3.2 grade point average, is a member of his high school's rock music appreciation club and French club. He also applied to McGill University in Canada, the University of Maryland and Towson University in Maryland. "Now I'm afraid I won't get into McGill or Maryland, and I'll get stuck going to Towson," which he considers "one step above community college."</p>

<p>If Mr. King is turned down by McGill, he says he will reapply to Berklee next year. He says he is feeling pessimistic after the Berklee rejection, but there is one consolation: "No matter what, everyone is like, 'I'm so done with high school,'" he says.</p>

<p>Write to Anjali Athavaley at <a href="mailto:anjali.athavaley@wsj.com">anjali.athavaley@wsj.com</a>1</p>

<p>Copyright © 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.</p>

<p>Will it ever stop getting harder?</p>

<p>Maybe they should limit the number of ivies people can apply to... it would increase both admit rates and yields.</p>

<p>wonderful. i just can't WAIT to apply next year. =&lt;/p>

<p>Haha, bunny, no kidding.</p>

<p>Man that sucks, but props to the class of 2011, or 2007 HS wise!</p>

<p>yeah each year the classes get more competitive
but i think this yr was exceptionally competitive
yay go class of '07 or '11 whatever haha:P</p>

<p>Keep in mind that:</p>

<p>1) the number of high school graduates is higher now than it has been in the past several years...this is simple demographics</p>

<p>and </p>

<p>2) more students are applying to more schools...a decade ago, many fewer students were applying to more than 10 schools than today, when it seems that most students looking at highly selective colleges are applying to AT LEAST 10 schools</p>

<p>And remember, just because admit rates are dropping and applicant numbers are rising, this does not necessarily mean that the <em>quality</em> of the applicant pool at a specific school has changed dramatically. At many schools, the caliber of student applying has changed, but this change is not as dramatic as many here on CC think it is.</p>

<p>Also because of the Internet there is more information out there about top schools. Applying is MUCH easier because of online applications and the common app. This is particularly helping with international applications. I think every college should have a great website. I am not sure admit officers realize how important their websites are.</p>

<p>
[quote]
I am not sure admit officers realize how important their websites are.

[/quote]

I think they do.</p>

<p>I almost hadn't applied to Bryn Mawr because their website is rather depressing (mostly dark colors and a lot of grey) and makes me feel bad every time I visit it. Somehow a picture of a happy student does not look too happy in grey.</p>

<p>"Colleges Reject Record Numbers"</p>

<p>I don't think this is a particularly well researched article. The author cites the same reasons typically cited.</p>

<p>1) an increasing number of HS grads. (rapdily so over the past 4-5 years)
2) an increasing number of international applicants.
3) common application (more applications per college-bound student)</p>

<p>Of course there will be a record number of rejections. UNC's acceptance rate fell by 0.8%. Under the circumstances, that's sounds pretty good. The anecdote about Mr. Andrews (great kids being turned down by HYPS) is all too common, not just this year but for the past 5, 10, 15 years.</p>

<p>There are some questions I would like answers to.
How has the mean number of applications per student changed or the past 5 years?
How has the number of seats at colleges changed in the past decade and where has the growth been?
What is happening to yields?
Why does Amherst put 1450 on the waiting list when it only enrolls less than one-third that number?</p>

<p>Probably because they expect less than one half to stay on the waitlist, all the waitlisted students are qualified (or "courtesy waitlists) and they want to fill some niches in the class - ie have an oboe player on the waitlist, someone from Alaska...</p>

<p>no biggie.....everyone can get in somewhere. Big drama about nada</p>