NACAC List Showing How Many Schools Have Weak Yield

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I was mildly surprised to see flagships like Kentucky on here. Catholic is on here. I don't think they were on this list last year along with Dayton and Xavier.

There are already International schools like St. Andrews and UCD that are still accepting applications.

More schools will have openings as the spring progresses.


UC Davis isn’t accepting applications. The UCs have the most messed up admissions practices. UC Davis has a low yield but rejects tons of high stat 4.0 that get into UCLA or CAL as well as anyone under an UW 4.0 for instate, lots of waitlist movement. UC Santa Barbara has had an 80% admit after waitlist rate.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I was mildly surprised to see flagships like Kentucky on here. Catholic is on here. I don't think they were on this list last year along with Dayton and Xavier.

There are already International schools like St. Andrews and UCD that are still accepting applications.

More schools will have openings as the spring progresses.


UC Davis isn’t accepting applications. The UCs have the most messed up admissions practices. UC Davis has a low yield but rejects tons of high stat 4.0 that get into UCLA or CAL as well as anyone under an UW 4.0 for instate, lots of waitlist movement. UC Santa Barbara has had an 80% admit after waitlist rate.


UCD is a university in Dublin.
Anonymous
Purdue is on here.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:New additions include Hampden-Sydney, UMASS Boston, Whitman College, Salisbury, Simmons, Sweet Briar, and University of Colorado Boulder (transfers.)


Surprising to see UC Boulder. I know that it has a reputation as being a safety school for Californians who can't get into a Univ of California school, but still surprising to see a flagship having issues.


The fact that UC Boulder is still accepting transfers doesn’t mean it’s having issues. I think in some cases people are reading a little too much into these lists.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Purdue is on here.


That’s Purdue Fort Wayne, a separate campus and regional college. A lot of people in this thread are not demonstrating critical thinking or reading skills!
Anonymous
This list has been around for decades.

Nothing new here. Maybe a few more schools, that's all.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:New additions include Hampden-Sydney, UMASS Boston, Whitman College, Salisbury, Simmons, Sweet Briar, and University of Colorado Boulder (transfers.)

It’s interesting that Whitman has yield issues while meeting full need. A bit of a hidden gem for sure.
Anonymous
Bucknell is still accepting freshman applications too.
Anonymous
& so is St A
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Bucknell is still accepting freshman applications too.


This really, really surprised me. I know some of us joke about Bucknell on this forum, but I’ve always considered it a respected and desired school. At least in the 1980s (a long time ago) in my area in the mid-Atlantic, it was seen as on par with the NESCAC schools.
I remember reading an article around the time of the pandemic that quoted the Bucknell admissions director as being surprised that they had to go to the waitlist for the first time in recent memory. The article went on to say that the school Bucknell loses the most students to is Penn State, not another expensive liberal arts college. Not meeting their freshman class enrollment goals could indicate that the price has finally exceeded what enough families are willing to pay, especially this year with all the economic uncertainty.
I know Franklin and Marshall recently started offering merit aid; I wonder if Bucknell will need to follow suit.
Small schools in remote locations also seem to be less popular with today’s students.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Bucknell is still accepting freshman applications too.


This really, really surprised me. I know some of us joke about Bucknell on this forum, but I’ve always considered it a respected and desired school. At least in the 1980s (a long time ago) in my area in the mid-Atlantic, it was seen as on par with the NESCAC schools.
I remember reading an article around the time of the pandemic that quoted the Bucknell admissions director as being surprised that they had to go to the waitlist for the first time in recent memory. The article went on to say that the school Bucknell loses the most students to is Penn State, not another expensive liberal arts college. Not meeting their freshman class enrollment goals could indicate that the price has finally exceeded what enough families are willing to pay, especially this year with all the economic uncertainty.
I know Franklin and Marshall recently started offering merit aid; I wonder if Bucknell will need to follow suit.
Small schools in remote locations also seem to be less popular with today’s students.


That's why you see schools like Villanova, BC, Georgetown, crushing those like Bucknell. This should be a major red flag for a school like Bucknell.

No longer are there enough B+, A- students who want to go there versus somewhere more vibrant like Boston, NYC, Philly, Baltimore, DC.
Anonymous
We ran the number for many schools using MyIntuition, and Bucknell was significantly more expensive than any other school we checked. We decided against visiting it after that.
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