UCLA admission rate for class of 2013

<p>Does any know or heard anything about what the admission rate for UCLA was this year. I am going to guess in the teens......19%, but it could be lower! I read some articles saying many universities were very unsure what their yields would be this year. I have a feeling that UCLA and Berkeley's yields are going to be a couple percentage points higher this year.</p>

<p>There was another post talking about this, and from what I’ve read, the percent was around 21-23% Berkeley is around the same also.</p>

<p>out of 55,700 applicants and 10-12k offered admission, thats around 21-23% plus or minus 1%</p>

<p>has any anouncements came out yet about how many admitted?</p>

<p>what about the admission rate for internationals/out of staters?</p>

<p>[UCLA</a> Undergrad Admissions: Profile of Admitted Freshmen, Fall 2009](<a href=“http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/Prospect/Adm_fr/Frosh_Prof09.htm]UCLA”>http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/Prospect/Adm_fr/Frosh_Prof09.htm)</p>

<p>in state: 21.66%
out of state: 26.89%
international: 18.21%</p>

<p>It keeps getting harder…</p>

<p>A quick look at this reveals that </p>

<ul>
<li>UCLA rejects 22.6% of <em>unweighted</em> 4.0 applicants</li>
<li>UCLA rejects 55% of SAT math section 700+ scoring applicants</li>
<li>UCLA rejects 62% of <em>unweighted</em> 3.7 - 3.99 applicants</li>
<li>UCLA rejects 55% of ACT 30-36 scorers</li>
</ul>

<p>It is also mildly unsettling to see that AP/Approved Honors/IB = “HONORS LEVEL” courses taken keeps increasing for admitted applicants…</p>

<p>UCLA Accepts 45% of applicants who have taken 20 or more semesters of “HONORS LEVEL”
UCLA Accepts only 27% of applicnats who have taken 16-19 of HONORS LEVEL
UCLA Accepts only 14% of applicants who have taken 12-15 of HONORS LEVEL</p>

<p>what is disturbing about these figures is that 12-15 semesters of HONORS LEVEL (6 or 7 +1 courses over 3 years) is probably an amount most applicants thinks represents much higher than normal “rigor”. That would be 2 in 10th, 2 in 11th, and 3 in 12th as a normal progression. It does not appear that UCLA shares this opinion.</p>