Anonymous wrote:What source?
Anonymous wrote:I suspect we might see acceptance rates start to creep back up a little at the most selective schools, not because of any "birth dearth" but because they've now gotten low enough that more kids are (realistically) self-selecting out of the most competitive pools. Fewer kids with impeccable academic credentials but nothing on their applications that's really needle-moving beyond that will throw their hats in the ring when they're staring at a 4% acceptance rate than a 9% one. That doesn't mean acceptance will have become any easier, though, it just means that fewer kids who never were going to get in anyway would have applied.
A ~10% total decline from 2025 to 2037. That has meaningful implications for society and for weak colleges but not for strong colleges (or for anyone's chances of admission thereto).Anonymous wrote:The birth rate declined starting in 2008 due to the recession. High school graduation numbers are predicted to peak in 2025 and then steadily decrease.
Marginal changes in birthrates are not driving the application numbers at selective universities. The coming decline in HS-graduate-aged kids in the U.S. will be a big problem for the community colleges, directional publics, and local/regional privates that already are struggling; it'll be a non-event for any of the schools that posters write about here.Anonymous wrote:I thought this was peak birth year- 2007 babies.
Anonymous wrote:I thought this was peak birth year- 2007 babies.