economic downturn - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com Great College Advice Sat, 16 Aug 2025 18:28:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/758df36141c47d1f8f375b9cc39a9095.png economic downturn - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com 32 32 Application Numbers at Top-Ranked Schools https://greatcollegeadvice.com/application-numbers-at-top-ranked-schools/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=application-numbers-at-top-ranked-schools Mon, 08 Feb 2010 15:40:07 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=3842 An article in Business Week published last month compared the application numbers from several top-ranked institutions.  The majority of the institutions have seen an increase in applications this year, making admission more selective than ever.  Several experts quoted in the article sight the increase in application numbers as a direct result of the economic downturn. […]

The post Application Numbers at Top-Ranked Schools first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>
An article in Business Week published last month compared the application numbers from several top-ranked institutions.  The majority of the institutions have seen an increase in applications this year, making admission more selective than ever.  Several experts quoted in the article sight the increase in application numbers as a direct result of the economic downturn.  Students are seeking admission to top-ranked universities because they (or their parents) believe that they will be more likely to obtain a job after graduation.  Some schools have also increased the amount of financial aid available.
Meanwhile, the Yale Daily News, published an article on how their applications decreased this year, despite the trends mentioned above.  Officials at Yale are unable to pinpoint a reason for the slight dip in their application numbers and added that Yale “continues to attract top-quality candidates”.
Katherine Price
Educational Consultant

The post Application Numbers at Top-Ranked Schools first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>
Most Students Attend the Type of College They Prefer–Despite Economy https://greatcollegeadvice.com/most-students-attend-the-type-of-college-they-prefer-despite-economy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=most-students-attend-the-type-of-college-they-prefer-despite-economy Wed, 08 Jul 2009 14:35:15 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=2582 The Chronicle of Higher Education reports this morning on a new study that finds that the overwhelming majority of students heading off to college this fall will be attending the sort of college they prefer. Of the nearly 40,000 respondents, 86% of those who said they preferred a public college will be attending a public […]

The post Most Students Attend the Type of College They Prefer–Despite Economy first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>
The Chronicle of Higher Education reports this morning on a new study that finds that the overwhelming majority of students heading off to college this fall will be attending the sort of college they prefer.

Of the nearly 40,000 respondents, 86% of those who said they preferred a public college will be attending a public college this fall. Among those who said they preferred a private college, 76% will be enrolling in a private college.

Interestingly, the economics of admission cut both ways for students.  Students who preferred private schools but enrolled in a public one cited costs of enrollment as the major factor.  However,  students who switched to attend a private school despite their preference for a public one, also reported economics as a factor:  they received good financial aid packages with both need-based and merit-based awards.

So, clearly, the economic downturn has had an impact, but not always the one we might assume.  That impact is different for different students, depending on their preferences and depending on how well they play the college admission and financial aid game.

The game will be no different in the coming year.  Students who take the time to ask themselves what they really want, who find schools who match their criteria very closely, and who are willing to develop a winning strategy for admissions and financial aid, the global economy may not affect their educational future one iota.

Educational Consultant

 

 

The post Most Students Attend the Type of College They Prefer–Despite Economy first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>
Colleges and Universities React to the Economic Crisis: Gnash Teeth, Wring Hands…and Repeat https://greatcollegeadvice.com/colleges-and-universities-react-to-the-economic-crisis/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=colleges-and-universities-react-to-the-economic-crisis Tue, 10 Mar 2009 13:59:49 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=1979 In a pair of pieces appearing this past weekend in the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, two journalists illustrate that this admissions season perhaps will be the wackiest ever. Not only are students sweating over whether they will be accepted or rejected, colleges are facing the same anxieties: will enough students say […]

The post Colleges and Universities React to the Economic Crisis: Gnash Teeth, Wring Hands…and Repeat first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>
In a pair of pieces appearing this past weekend in the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, two journalists illustrate that this admissions season perhaps will be the wackiest ever.

Not only are students sweating over whether they will be accepted or rejected, colleges are facing the same anxieties: will enough students say yes to their offers, thereby helping to make their financial targets for the year.

“Financial targets,” you ask? “You mean to say, Mark, that this admissions process is largely about making budget?”

Um, yeah.

You see, most colleges and universities, both public and private, are tuition-driven. That is, each year’s expenses must be paid by the tuition revenue collected that same year. Hand-to-mouth. Year-to-year.

Only a handful of really wealthy, heavily endowed universities are immune to the fact that tuition revenues keep the doors open. And with the financial crisis affecting everything in our economy, colleges and universities are finding it difficult to plan–at the very least.

And a few, like the College of Santa Fe, may actually shrivel up and die.

A while back I prognosticated some of the potential effects of the financial crisis on higher education. It’s too early to tell whether any of my predictions will come true.

But one thing is indisputable: most colleges are worried about their yield rates and their budgets.  (Skeptical?  Read the article from the New York Times here and the Los Angeles Times here.)

So here is a refined set of prognostications for how college and university admissions and financial aid offices will likely react to tough economic times.

  1. More students will be placed on waiting lists. And the students most likely to be pulled off waiting lists will be those able to pay the entire cost of tuition.
  2. More colleges may be unable to meet the full financial need of those students they admit. And those colleges that do not meet full demonstrated need will meet a lower percentage of that need than in the past.
  3. Admissions offices will have a keen eye cocked on persistence rates: are current students leaving because they can no longer afford to pay tuition?
  4. Transfer students with ability to pay full freight may have better chances at some selective colleges this year, especially if persistence rates drop due to financial difficulties (see above).
  5. Colleges will do everything they can to maintain levels of financial aid at past levels–in the aggregate. But in practice admissions and financial aid may be more stingy in doling out the merit aid this year.
  6. Whatever the impact the economic crisis has on admissions, there is little doubt that students will see an impact on their experience in college. Announcements of hiring freezes mean larger average class sizes. Some campuses are eliminating competitive sports. Student services may be cut back commensurate with staffing cuts.

Only a few short weeks (days, even!) until colleges and universities send out their admissions decisions and financial aid offers.  And then another 30 days of anxious waiting as students make their decisions about which college will earn their loyalty…and their money.

 

The post Colleges and Universities React to the Economic Crisis: Gnash Teeth, Wring Hands…and Repeat first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>
Financial Aid and College Planning in Tough Economic Times https://greatcollegeadvice.com/financial-aid-and-college-planning-in-tough-economic-times/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=financial-aid-and-college-planning-in-tough-economic-times Mon, 09 Mar 2009 13:46:24 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=1935 Here I am being interviewed by 9News KUSA, the NBC affiliate in Denver, about how to think about college selection and financial aid in tough economic times.

The post Financial Aid and College Planning in Tough Economic Times first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>
Here I am being interviewed by 9News KUSA, the NBC affiliate in Denver, about how to think about college selection and financial aid in tough economic times.

The post Financial Aid and College Planning in Tough Economic Times first appeared on College Admission Counseling.

]]>