University of Virginia - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com Great College Advice Fri, 15 Aug 2025 10:30:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/758df36141c47d1f8f375b9cc39a9095.png University of Virginia - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com 32 32 Early Admissions is Here to Stay Despite Critics https://greatcollegeadvice.com/early-admissions-is-here-to-stay-despite-critics/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=early-admissions-is-here-to-stay-despite-critics Wed, 17 Nov 2010 16:21:48 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=6515 A few years ago, some commentators thought early admissions programs might fade away. But colleges love these programs too much to let them end.

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With November 15th here and gone, the deadlines for early college applications have passed.  But early admissions programs are here to stay.
In past years, several leading universities (Harvard, Princeton, University of Virginia) did away with their early admissions programs. These moves by the some of the most selective universities in the land were heralded as a harbinger of things to come.
It turns out that colleges love these programs too much to eliminate them, and some that eliminated them are bringing them back.
In an article in today’s Inside Higher Ed, we learn that UVA has decided to reinstate its early admissions program. The reason colleges love these early programs is not that they want to help students in any way with their decisions or to lessen the application burden. No. Colleges love these early programs because they help take some of the guesswork in enrollment management.
[For a thorough explanation of early decision programs, see the article “Early Decision or Regular Decision:  Which is Better?“.]
Colleges love early programs for two primary reasons.
First, early applicants are more likely to accept an offer of admission. These yield rates (or the percentage of admitted students who accept an offer of admission) are important, not only for managing enrollment, but because yield rates are part of many ranking systems: the higher the yield rate, the better the school is assumed to be (this is bunk: just because a school is “popular” does not make it better–but that’s another story).
Second, early applicants tend to have more resources and thus require less financial aid. Schools are businesses and they need to pay their bills. If a college can fill 30% of its seats in an early round with students requiring less financial aid, then they can worry less in the regular round about allocating their need-based and merit-based financial aid awards.
Think of it this way: each accepted student can be equated with a certain amount revenue. All things being equal, kids with more revenue (sorry to say) may be more desirable than kids who need financial aid. The ability to pay is (sorry to say again) is a credential in admissions. And as keepers of the budget, admissions and financial aid offices must work in tandem to ensure that the university’s revenue targets are met. Of course, some schools (Harvard, Princeton) need to worry less about their revenue streams, as they have a thick financial cushion. But the upper strata of financially-secure schools is a tiny minority: most other schools must monitor their revenue targets carefully, and early admissions programs help colleges do just that.
Critics of early admissions programs rightfully point out that they put poorer kids at a disadvantage. This is true and lamentable. But it is unreasonable to expect that private universities, especially, will do away with early admissions programs altogether. Colleges are businesses (despite lovely speeches to the contrary), and unless they pay close attention to their budgets, they may end up like Birmingham Southern College or (worse) Antioch College.
So my take? I guess I would defend private colleges’ rights to create and use early admissions programs–whether binding or not–as a way to manage their budgets and their enrollments. They have to be responsible stewards of their own resources, and early admissions programs help them do that.
But I find it annoying that the University of Virginia, a publicly funded institution, would find it necessary to reinstate early programs. UVA operates under a moral mandate to serve the citizens of Virginia–rich and poor alike. If it is true (and research seems to indicate) that poorer students are disadvantaged by early admissions programs, then I wonder whether one might be able to claim discrimination based on ability to pay? Wouldn’t that be an interesting lawsuit? I wonder of Lloyd Thacker of the Education Conservancy might want to battle against those windmills? Probably not.
Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant

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Elite Colleges Take More Students from Waiting Lists https://greatcollegeadvice.com/elite-colleges-take-more-students-from-waiting-lists/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=elite-colleges-take-more-students-from-waiting-lists Sat, 24 May 2008 14:25:04 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=223 This was a brutal year for admissions to top colleges. The applicant pool was larger than ever before. Harvard and Princeton did away with their early decision programs. Many elite colleges, including the Ivies, Lafayette, Bowdoin, and Stanford, announced generous new financial aid policies. And many colleges increased the size of their waiting lists, in […]

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This was a brutal year for admissions to top colleges. The applicant pool was larger than ever before. Harvard and Princeton did away with their early decision programs. Many elite colleges, including the Ivies, Lafayette, Bowdoin, and Stanford, announced generous new financial aid policies.
And many colleges increased the size of their waiting lists, in part because of the uncertainty these changes wrought in admissions offices at these schools.
The result is that many colleges are taking many more students from their waiting lists than in the past.
Here’s a snippet from a recent article about waiting lists from the Wall Street Journal:

The wait-list bonanza isn’t because colleges have more slots available for students — in fact, overall enrollment levels at many schools remained the same as last year.

Instead, colleges this year faced more uncertainty in the applications process. For one thing, there’s a growing population of high-school seniors — many of whom submit applications to multiple schools. But for highly selective schools, what really affected the process was the move by two Ivy League schools to end their early-admissions programs. Also at play were policy changes that made more financial aid available to middle- and upper-class students.

So while this is good news for some students on waiting lists, keep in mind that the numbers are still quite small. Here are the numbers that will pulled off the waiting list at some schools:

University of Wisconsin-Madison: This year: 800; Last year 6
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill: This year 300; Last year 226
Boston College: This year 250; Last year 117
Harvard University: This year 200: Last year 50
Princeton University: This year 90; Last yaer 47
Georgetown University: This year 80; Last year 29
Yale University: This year 46; Last year 50
Hamilton College: This year: 36; Last year: 24
Massachusetts Institute of Technology: This year 35; Last year: 20
Johns Hopkins University: This year: 30; Last year: 86
Swarthmore College: This year: 22; Last year: 42
Pomona College: This year: 16; Last year: 17
University of Chicago: This year: 10 to 15; Last year: 0
Stanford University: This year: 0; Last year: 0
University of Virginia: This year: 0; Last year: 150

 

Mark Montgomery
College Counselor

 

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