Duke admits 18.8% for Class of 2012

<p>Duke Offers Admission to 3,342 Applicants for Class of 2012 Following Record Number of Applications</p>

<p>Durham, NC -- Duke University this week offered admission in the Class of 2012 to 3,342 high school seniors from across the country and around the world.</p>

<p>The students were selected from a pool of 20,337 applicants, the largest in Duke’s history. The university seeks to enroll 1,657 first-year students this fall. In December, 472 students were admitted under Duke’s early decision program, bringing the total number of admitted students to 3,814. They were notified by mail and online.</p>

<p>This represents an 18.8 percent overall acceptance rate, a record low for the university. Last year the rate was 20 percent.</p>

<p>“While we’re naturally pleased with the size and quality of the applicant pool, what matters more is that the students we’ve accepted are exactly the kind of individuals we want at Duke -- talented, accomplished, interesting, deeply engaged in their communities, ambitious and just good, nice people,” said Christoph Guttentag, dean of undergraduate admissions.</p>

<p>Almost one in six applicants with a class rank was ranked first in his or her class. Of those admitted, 585 were valedictorians and 1,570 had SAT scores of 1,500 or higher.</p>

<p>Of the total admitted, 2,933 were accepted to the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences and 881 were accepted to the Pratt School of Engineering.</p>

<p>The admitted class includes a record number of international students (277), students from North Carolina (466) and children of alumni (300).</p>

<p>Guttentag said Duke’s new financial aid initiatives and the new DukeEngage program were likely factors in the increased interest in Duke among students.</p>

<p>“Many of the admissions officers noticed in particular that DukeEngage came up often in applicants’ essays,” Guttentag said.</p>

<p>In February 2007, Duke announced the DukeEngage program, which provides significant funding and faculty support to undergraduates who want to apply classroom learning to addressing societal issues at home and abroad in an immersive service experience.</p>

<p>“I believe much of the increase in applications has arisen from the visibility and considerable appeal of DukeEngage, and from the changes in our financial aid practices benefiting low- and middle-income families,” Guttentag said.</p>

<p>In December, Duke President Richard H. Brodhead announced significant enhancements to the university’s financial aid program. These included eliminating parental contributions for families who make less than $60,000 a year; making it possible for students from families with incomes below $40,000 to graduate debt-free; reducing loans for students from families with incomes up to $100,000; and capping loans for eligible families with incomes above $100,000.</p>

<p>The new financial aid initiatives -- expected to benefit as many as 2,500 of Duke’s 6,250 undergraduates -- are projected to increase average grant support $2,500 annually for each need-based aid recipient, reducing the average costs to these students and their families by $10,000 over four years. Officials estimate that next year’s average need-based grant will exceed $30,000.</p>

<p>Guttentag said it’s difficult to predict how many students will accept Duke’s offer of admission, in part because of changes in financial aid practices and early-decision programs at peer institutions.</p>

<p>“There’s a little more uncertainty for all of us this year in predicting the exact number of students accepting our offer of admission. Normally we prefer to admit about 50 students from the waiting list, but we’re less sure this year how many we’ll be able to admit. We might end up admitting a few more but, given the increased response we’ve seen so far to our on-campus programs, we might end up admitting fewer. It’s an interesting year,” he said.</p>

<p>Duke</a> Offers Admission to 3,342 Applicants for Class of 2012 Following Record Number of Applications</p>

<p>Wait I’m confused…what if more students say YES than the # of seats they have? They HAVE to take in all of them, right?</p>

<p>Predator - yes. We had a bumper crop of engineers one year - 50 more than planned for. It was fun 'cause I got to teach all of them - had to nearly double the number of TAs, purchase several computers, and expand to a larger room.</p>

<p>With the way the Ivys are working out today..I say get ready for another one of those years</p>

<p>I had no idea you taught at Duke, DukeEgr93…I assumed you were just an alum of '93 who stopped in to offer help</p>

<p>:)</p>

<p>^^Well, you’re right Majayiduke09. DukeEgr93 is a 1993 graduate of Duke. He just loved it so much that he hasn’t left since! Got his undergraduate and graduate degrees at Duke, and started teaching immediately after that. How long have you been at Duke, Dr. G? Half your life? Sorry if I’m releasing information that you hoped to keep anonymous, but from knowing you, it seems like you don’t mind at all and people refer to you as Dr. G on this site all the time. Oh yeah, take a class with him! It’s awesome.</p>

<p>Damn he literally bleeds Cameron blue</p>

<p>Wow…there is a physics teacher at my high school who got his masters/phd from duke, named “Doc G”…</p>

<p>And he probably got his degree around 1993… weird</p>

<p>So much for the lacrosse scandal… Although I wonder how many of the 3,342 admitted students were recruited for lacrosse.</p>

<p>Looking at these statistics makes me feel lucky just to be waitlisted…and I hope enrollment is low this year :-p Duke is easily my number 1.</p>

<p>Just makes my choice all the harder…currently deciding between blue and red, Duke and Cornell…</p>

<p>I have the exact same problem swuster!</p>

<p>…except that I’ve gotten waitlisted at Duke…</p>

<p>bluedog - it’s actually…officially over half my life now :smiley: That does mean I was here for all three men’s BBall nat’l championships, though.</p>

<p>No worries about people knowing who I am - I mean, my woefully outdated xanga page is my link in my public profile… Glad you’re enjoying class, though!</p>

<p>It is hard to say what Duke’s yield is going to be this year.
It really matters by the percentage of the people who were accepted are also HYPSM-admits. This is the reason why Duke’s yield has been consistently below 50%.
Given that Harvard and Princeton both got rid of their early programs.. I can see all of these colleges’ yields going down.</p>

<p>Duke sounds awesome, especially for biomedical engineering. It’s just too expensive!!! It would cost me far more to go to Duke that it would to go to Princeton.</p>