<p>Applications increase 10 percent
Record number of total undergraduate apps shows biggest jump in the Ivy League
Jon Meza
Posted: 2/12/07
With students submitting the Common Application for the first time, the University saw the number of total undergraduate applicants once again reach an all-time high this year.</p>
<p>The admissions office has received 22,427 applications, a 10-percent increase over last year’s total of 20,423, according to Dean of Admissions Lee Stetson.</p>
<p>The jump represented the largest increase in the Ivy League, with all eight schools except for Harvard University reporting numbers. Yale University, with a 9.7-percent decrease, was the only school to see a drop.</p>
<p>Records were also set for the number of African American, Hispanic and international applicants, as well as for 32 different states across the country.</p>
<p>Stetson said he believes Penn’s increase is more so a product of the University’s recruiting efforts than the addition of the Common App, adding that he only expected 1,000 more applications as a result of the new application.</p>
<p>“The Common Application accounts for some, but not all of, the increase,” Stetson said. The numbers really “reflect the positive visibility of the University.”</p>
<p>Stetson’s assessment was reiterated by admissions experts, who said Penn’s rigorous supplement would deter those who would apply simply because the Common App is fast and simple.</p>
<p>The increase is truly a product of the growing popularity of Penn’s urban location and academic programs, said college counselor Noreen Cambria of Cambria Associates.</p>
<p>“Penn has always been on the cutting edge of reaching out to the global community,” added Wharton alumnus Adam Goldberg, a counselor for the New England Educational Advisory Service.</p>
<p>Overall, the University rebounded from a 2.5-percent decrease in applicants from Early Decision with 18,439 regular decision applicants, a total increase of 13 percent over last year’s overall total of 16,363.</p>
<p>Applicant totals for each undergraduate school were up across the board, with Engineering experiencing the biggest jump - a 17-percent increase. Wharton applicants rose 13 percent, while the College and Nursing both increased by seven percent.</p>
<p>The racial diversity of the applicant pool skyrocketed, with African Americans increasing 20 percent and Hispanics rising 18 percent.</p>
<p>Following a trend that was apparent since early decision, international applications jumped 19 percent.</p>
<p>The applicant pool also experienced astonishing growth in geographic diversity compared to past years.</p>
<p>Stetson characterized this year’s applicant pool as “dramatically more representative of the nation,” with 57 percent of all applications coming from outside the Northeast Corridor.</p>
<p>Penn is more popular locally as well, with the number of applicants from Philadelphia rising 12 percent, from 485 to 543.</p>
<p>The 1,325 legacy applicants also set a record by making up 6 percent of the entire pool.</p>
<p>Stetson said that it is too early to release any academic statistics, but that “it is fair to say that this is a strong academic group.”</p>
<p>The admissions office is still expecting about 60 more applications to be added to the final count, bringing the total to about 22,500. </p>