College Admissions Help Blog

College Search and Admissions Help Blog

11.28.07 | A Shift In Applications As Early Admission Is Cut

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

By ALAN FINDER
Published: November 28, 2007

When Harvard, Princeton and the University of Virginia announced that they would eliminate early admission starting this fall, many educators wondered whether the decision would alter the strategies of thousands of students seeking a spot at the nation’s most selective colleges and universities.
Now that the first round of applications in the revised landscape have been submitted, they are still wondering.
Admissions officials and high school guidance counselors had speculated that high-achieving high school seniors who once would have sought early admission to Harvard and Princeton would instead turn to other prestigious universities — including Yale, Stanford and Georgetown — that offer a nonbinding form of early admission. The reasoning was that these students would try to assure themselves a place early in the admissions cycle, but in the regular round over the winter, would still apply to Harvard and Princeton.
As expected, the number of applicants seeking nonbinding early admission, often called early action, soared at some prestigious universities, including Yale and Georgetown.
“There are only a few top schools that have early action, and we figured we would get a share of that,” said Charles A. Deacon, Georgetown’s dean of admissions. Georgetown, which received 4,562 early applications last year, had 5,980 this fall, a 31 percent increase.
But at other elite universities that offer early action, the number of applications did not increase significantly.
At Stanford, 4,574 early-action applications came in last year by the deadline of Nov. 1 — almost the same number that arrived this year.
“I don’t know what to make of it,” said Richard H. Shaw, dean of admission and financial aid at Stanford, adding, “We’re perfectly happy with the numbers we have.”
There were about 10 percent more early-action applications this year at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, compared with the 3,493 last year, said Stuart Schmill, the interim director of admissions, although the final tally has not yet been determined. But Mr. Schmill warned that it was not clear whether the increase this year was attributable to the elimination of early admission at Harvard and Princeton, because in recent years early applications to M.I.T. had been increasing anyway.
Some Ivy League universities that offer binding early admissions, including Dartmouth, Brown and Columbia, also reported modest increases in their applications this fall, though none attributed this to the elimination of early admission at other universities.
Many deans at universities offering early action think fewer students admitted early will end up enrolling. At Georgetown, the yield on early action — the proportion of students accepted who eventually attend — has been about 60 percent, Mr. Deacon said. This year, he said, it could decline to 50 percent.
Yale officials also said it will be harder this year to predict how many applicants offered early admission will choose to be freshmen next fall. “We’re kind of puzzling over that,” said Jeffrey Brenzel, Yale’s dean of admissions.
The entire admissions picture at Yale this year is kind of a puzzle, too. Yale’s early-action applications grew to 4,820 this year, from 3,541 last year, seemingly a 36 percent increase. But early applications to Yale declined significantly last year, compared with the previous year. So the number this year, compared with 2005, when there were 4,084 early applications, is really an 18 percent increase.
Some educators think the decline at Yale a year ago was caused by the news, the previous spring, that the university had become the first Ivy League school to admit fewer than 10 percent of its applicants in its early and regular rounds combined. But Mr. Brenzel does not accept that theory. Nor does he feel ready to explain the increase this year. “I resist the temptation to speculate,” he said, “because we really don’t know.”

11.28.07 | Is having an identity in college admissions wrong?

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

A recent New York Times articles discusses the packaging or branding of students applying to selective colleges. The article is critical of private consultants for using “Madison Avenue” language in helping students who are applying to colleges. But as the article points out, the colleges themselves have been engaged in this same activity in their admissions activities.

The problem is not that students are being helped to show colleges who they are and what their focus has been. Rather the problem occurs when some consultants attempt to make a student into something that they are not. Feigning an interest in a particular topic to appear to be a better candidate for a particular school is wrong and should be discouraged. The article mentions an Eagle scout who was encouraged to engage in AIDS related volunteer work. If the student had and interest in such volunteer work then that is great. But most admissions officers are smart enough to understand that not all boy scouts are homophobic.

Students need to put together a college application that clearly shows who they are particularly when applying to a selective college. Whether they are using a private consultant or not, the failure to put together such an application is an invitation to a thin envelope in the spring.

11.27.07 | Online profiles a factor in college admissions

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

If you’re a high school junior or senior, you’re probably working hard to get into college — researching schools online, preparing applications, taking grueling SATs and ACTs and writing the perfect essay. Maybe you have an air-tight application.

But you could still blow it, with something you thought was harmless fun: Your online profile.

Read the Full Article

Also, the Financial Aid Podcast (www.FinancialAidPodcast.com) provides an insightful look into what people can really find out about you from your online presence, visit: what-the-web-says-about-you – at
http://www.financialaidpodcast.com/

Have something to add – submit your comments!

11.15.07 | How To Get Into College – Online College Admission Websites

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

The internet is great. We now have access to much more information when we need it it ways we never thought possible. Even better, we can share these resources with each other. With that in mind, I wanted to share with you some valuable resources you can use to help with your college admission journey.

(Submit your own list of resources as a comment!)

The above all contribute to this blog and we are grateful. Additional college admission resources:

Again – Share your list with us in the comments sections!

11.07.07 | Wesleyan University to replace loans with grants for neediest students

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

Wesleyan University will eliminate loans for its neediest undergraduates and replace these with additional grants, President Michael S. Roth has announced. The policy will be part of a new initiative to reduce overall student indebtedness by 35 percent to make Wesleyan even more accessible to students regardless of their financial capacity.

“Access to a Wesleyan education for students from all backgrounds has long been one of the core values of this community,” Roth said. “It remains one of our highest priorities. As I begin my presidency, I see this new effort as a down payment on our goal to endow financial aid and need-blind admission more fully in the next campaign.” Roth was formally inaugurated as Wesleyan’s 16th president at ceremonies on campus on November 2.

Beginning with the first-year class enrolling in the fall of 2008, most students whose total family incomes are $40,000 per year or less will receive an aid package that substitutes grants for any loan obligation. Beginning with the same class, all other students who receive aid will graduate with a four-year total loan indebtedness reduced by an average of 35 percent. Aid packages will include a single student loan, the federally subsidized Stafford Loan. The interest rates for Stafford Loans are among the lowest available.

Wesleyan will raise endowment sufficient to fund the $3.2 million annual cost of this initiative. In fact, preliminary conversations with Wesleyan donors about the goal of reducing student indebtedness already have yielded over $10 million in new commitments to student aid, Roth reported.

Wesleyan admits students without regard to their financial circumstances and then provides a financial aid package that meets each student’s full demonstrated need. Forty percent of its 2,900 students currently receive grant aid. The average grant is $27,151. Wesleyan currently budgets $35.4 million of its own resources annually for grant aid for undergraduates. Federal and state sources contribute an additional $2.7 million.

Since the 1960s, Wesleyan has aggressively pursued diversity in the form of affirmative action and need-blind admissions.

Thirteen percent of Wesleyan students currently receive Pell grants; the federal Pell Grant Program provides need-based grants to low-income undergraduate students to promote access to postsecondary education.

Wesleyan also is celebrating the 40th anniversary of its Upward Bound program. Upward Bound is an educational opportunity outreach program supported through federal TRIO funding, as well as through grants from Connecticut Department of Education and the boards of education of the Middletown, Meriden and Portland schools; it provides fundamental support to low-income students in their preparation for college. Wesleyan recently received a TRIO grant to establish a Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program focused on students in the sciences; the McNair program prepares students from disadvantaged backgrounds and who have demonstrated high academic potential for doctoral studies through involvement in research and other scholarly activities.

11.05.07 | Augustana Drops SAT/ACT Requirement

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

Augustana dropped its SAT/ACT admissions requirement.

11.01.07 | Vanderbilt University video on college admissions

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

Vanderbilt University has made available a video with their Dean of Admissions that discusses a variety of college admissions topics. Included on the video are the Dean’s comments on how to improve your chances of admission to a selective college, the importance of extracurricular activities in applying to college, how to prepare for the college essay and many other topics.

I would urge anyone considering admission to a selective college to watch the video. Although this is from Vanderbilt the comments made apply to virtually all selective colleges in this country.