is there a link for the results/stats of the 2009 admissions?

<p>is there a link/thread for the results of the 2009 admissions with stats? if so, what is is?</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=108521%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=108521&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>In addition to what Dylan posted you can get info about previous classes by reviewing Dartmouth's Common Data Sets.</p>

<p>Basic information about Dartmouth is provided in the Common Data Set, a survey that is used by several college guides.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.dartmouth.edu/%7Eoir/dataset.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.dartmouth.edu/~oir/dataset.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>2004-2005 class of 08
2003-2004 class of 07
2002-2003 class of 06</p>

<p>DARTMOUTH admission statistics – Class of 2009</p>

<p>Total apps: 12,756
Total admits: 2,171
Total enrolled: 1,074
Overall admit rate: 17%
Overall yield: 49.5%
ED apps: 1,180
ED admits: 400
ED enrolled: 381
ED admit rate: 33.9%
ED yield: 95%
RD apps: 12,356
RD admits: 1,774
RD enrolled: 693
RD admit rate: 14.4%
RD yield: 39.1%
Percentage Af/Am: 7.5%
Percentage Hispanic: 6.1%
Total scholarship aid: $12.4 million</p>

<p>*they could have gotten 1,075 enrolled if they accepted me :)</p>

<p>ED yield only 95%?</p>

<p>That's fairly common. A few students drop out of their ED agreement every yeat because they didn't receive enough fin. aid, etc.</p>

<p>A few? 5% seems like more than a few, but the explanation seems reasonable.</p>

<p>What happens to them?</p>

<p>It is 5%, but that's also only 19 kids, that's not terribly many. I assume they end up applying to other places RD, and then are ultimately tempted too much by merit money someplace else. The ethical and legal ramifications of opting out of your ED contract has been discussed on a few other boards I believe. While technically I think it is a legal, binding, contract, I have never read any stories on CC about someone being sued by the school/getting in trouble for not attending.</p>

<p>but i thought you can't back out of ED, it's a binding contract right?</p>

<p>You can back out if you demonstrate that the financial aid package you received is in sufficient for you to attend and it is impossible for you to pay the whatever the college expects you to pay. However, no college in their right mind (which is all of them) will let you do this so you can go apply to their chief rivals. Ivy League schools will only let you out of the contrat on the condition that you attend a cheaper state college. This has been discussed on CC before.</p>