Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Posters bashing UMD for out of state acceptances and shutting out in state students … VA colleges are worse. My high stats nephew who graduated from TJ was rejected from UVA and Vtech but was accepted to UMD. Many students with him were also rejected from their in-state VA schools. A lot of them ended up at UMD. I don’t know what colleges gain by rejecting their own in state students.. but this is not unique to UMD IF this is actually happening..
More $$$s in the form of higher OOS tuition.
Also, in your case, your kids just popped over the Potomac and enrolled at UMD, so it's unlikely they have lost your kid as a high-earning VA resident when they graduate.
Now, if tons of UVA rejects ended up getting snapped up by UCLA or other UC schools and never returning...maybe the state would reconsider.
Anonymous wrote:Posters bashing UMD for out of state acceptances and shutting out in state students … VA colleges are worse. My high stats nephew who graduated from TJ was rejected from UVA and Vtech but was accepted to UMD. Many students with him were also rejected from their in-state VA schools. A lot of them ended up at UMD. I don’t know what colleges gain by rejecting their own in state students.. but this is not unique to UMD IF this is actually happening..
Anonymous wrote:Are there any rules for colleges accepting in-state and out-of-state students? Or is this now completely based on the total profit colleges receive?
Anonymous wrote:UMD Out-of-State acceptance rates are greater than the In-State acceptance rate. Students from Maryland are suffering.
Anonymous wrote:This is the case in many states
Anonymous wrote:UMD Out-of-State acceptance rates are greater than the In-State acceptance rate. Students from Maryland are suffering.
Anonymous wrote:This has been true for a while.
Maryland admissions are very different depending on where you are applying from- not just from out of the state, but also from different areas of Maryland.
As for yield, I am curious how they do in-state. I know that they have declining enrollment this year- something like 4% (https://dbknews.com/2025/05/06/umd-enrollment-admissions-fall-2024/) which makes me question whether their strategy for admissions is working like it should.
Being named a public Ivy should make them more desirable for the highest achievers, but I haven't seen that happen.