It's especially difficult to get admitted TO. It's mostly there for athletes and the children of donors. |
| Another deferred legacy. NoVa IB public, 1580 SAT, 4.38. |
That is outrageous. My DS was one of the kids WL and the accepted in August. There is something very wrong with their admissions strategy. |
|
There is a new director of admissions, so it’ll be interesting to see how the profile of legacies, etc, admits change. The previous director was there for 30 years.
I’m an alum with a DC who desperately wants to go in a couple of years, and the deferred and rejected legacies above will have me strongly reconsidering whether to even let DC try for ED. Those are crazy good stats. |
| What’s wrong with the South? That’s one of Duke’s pluses. |
Genuinely, thanks for that post. Takes some of the sting out.
|
Likely similar to Penn's director of admission change, with legacy becoming devalued in their admissions. |
It's extraordinary how much change a new director of admissions brings to a university. It's almost like college admissions are extremely... subjective. |
Really? I’m sure there were many students applying with a similar profile. Stats alone does not an acceptance make. |
Your kid sounds amazing, and it pains me that we live in a world where 1490 is better to be TO than report it. That's a very good score. |
|
I don't see wealthy legacies who are reasonably competitive being rejected at Duke.
Duke is all about money. Duke's endowment has grown tremendously - particularly during Nan Keohane's tenure (thank you Duke Basketball). Terry Sanford really kickstarted the focus on fundraising in 1970, and even hired a guy (his son was my classmate) to seek out students who later could contribute $10M or more. Sanford treated students well - immediately removing the cap on Jewish admissions in 1970, and started - with a long way to go - welcoming African American students. The common refrain is that all these top schools are about money - true. But with Duke it is an added factor and very obvious to those who attend. Anyone who matriculates should do a quick read of Robert Durden's the Dukes of Durham. That DNA is still there. |
Devaluing legacy is one of the responses to the end of affirmative action, it disproportionately benefits whites. . . |
|
An Admissions Dean wouldn't change a university's policy on legacy. The president or board would.
|
| I just heard of one from Churchill |
| Has Duke acknowledged the mistake where they sent congratulatory messages to deferred and rejected applicants upon opening notifications? Or are they just pretending that screw up never happened? |