Colleges Which are Still Accepting Applications

<p>Every year the National Association for College Admissions Counseling puts up a list of schools which are still accepting applications after the May 1 deposit deadline.
Here's the list <a href="http://www.nacacnet.org/research/research-data/College-Openings/Pages/College-Openings-Results.aspx"&gt;http://www.nacacnet.org/research/research-data/College-Openings/Pages/College-Openings-Results.aspx&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Some of the colleges on it are quite strong, others not so much. The colleges listed below were all featured in the Princeton Review's Best 378 Colleges and/or Fiske Guide. I excluded the ones which are not accepting freshmen. The list is probably incomplete as I don't have either guide on me right now,
Albion College<br>
Alma College
Alverno College
Appalachian State University (outstanding public for all things environmental science)
Arizona State University
Bard College at Simon's Rock (an early entry liberal arts college. Not to be confused with Bard College in Annondale on Hudson, NY)
Baylor University
Carroll College
Clark University<br>
Cornell College (operates on a one course at a time model. Not to be confused with Cornell University, an Ivy League school in upstate NY)
Drew University (good for preprofessional B students. Not the best option for a liberal arts inclined student)
Eckerd College (located on a beach with an outstanding marine science program)
Elizabethtown College<br>
Elmhurst College<br>
Florida Institute of Technology
Florida Southern College<br>
Gonzaga University
Green Mountain College (be aware that this school has recently had financial troubles)
Grove City College (very strong Christian school. Not recommended for less religious)
Hendrix College (excellent LAC in a suburb of Little Rock Arkansas)
Hiram College<br>
Hollins University (All women LAC in VA)
Houghton College (Christian school in upstate NY)
Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP) (public school in PA. Yes the name is confusing. Supposed to have a great party scene)
King's College London (UK school. Not listed in the guides but supposedly good)
Knox College (Galesburg sucks but the humanities program at the school does not)
Lawrence University (excellent LAC for physics and music lovers. Strong programs in many other fields)
Loyola University Maryland<br>
Luther College<br>
Lynchburg College<br>
Manhattanville College<br>
Marquette University (urban Jesuit private with good sports derived spirit and engineering)
Michigan Technological University (a STEM school located in a remote, but beautiful part of MI)
Mills College (all women LAC in Oakland, CA. Students often take courses at UC Berkeley)
Monmouth College<br>
Montana State University, Bozeman Montana<br>
New College of Florida (FL public LAC with a mandatory thesis)
Portland State University (commuter public located in downtown Portland)
Prescott College (hippy LAC in Prescott, AZ. Great for interdisciplinary work in environmental science)
Ripon College<br>
Saint Michael's College, Vermont
Seton Hall University (good international relations)
Siena College<br>
Southwestern University
St. Bonaventure University (great journalism program for such a small school)
St. Mary's College of Maryland (Maryland's public LAC in a remote oceanfront campus)
St. Thomas Aquinas College (Catholic school which uses a great books curriculum. Located in extremely rural CA)
State University of New York College at Potsdam
SUNY Maritime College (good for shipping career, and strong Mech E. Terrible guy to girl ratio)
Sweet Briar College (all women LAC)
The College of Idaho
The Evergreen State College (public LAC in WA. Operates on a very unique plan in which students spend a semester exploring one topic from a variety of angles)
The New School (urban school in the middle of NY. Poor financial aid)
The University of Arizona<br>
Trinity College Dublin (Irish school)
Truman State University (MO public medium sized school. Great english program, remote, and pretty ugly location)
UMBC - University of Maryland, Baltimore County (strong sciences)
Univeristy of South Dakota (very cheap public flagship)
University of Idaho
University of Mary Washington (medium sized VA school with strong programs in colonial history and archaeology. Poor guy to girl ratio)
University of Minnesota Morris (remote MN public LAC. Beautiful setting until the temps plunge to -50F)
University of Montana (the place for an aspiring conservationist. Missoula is a great college town and very gay friendly)
University of Vermont
University of Toledo (mandatory co-ops for engineering. However it is in Toledo...)
Valparaiso University (strong meteorology, Christian, but not extremely so, school)
Warren Wilson College (a work college where students are required to spend at least 15 hours working for the school in various capacities ranging from admissions to farm work. Hippy school with strong creative writing and environmental science)
Washington State University (great ag programs. Excellent party scene)
Wittenberg University (check into the financial health of the school)</p>

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<p>This is a semi cross post from the parents' forum. </p>

<p>Thank you!! </p>

<p>This is REALLY important - my brother went to a very good private school after applying in July after graduating and finding out in a few days that he was accepted.</p>