Anonymous wrote:There are some smaller colleges (ahem Colby) that use international students to inflate their stats to make the school seem more competitive.
First they make the application free, and don't require any supplementals, so applying is simply clicking a checkbox on Common App. Then they promise to meet 100% need for international students. Finally they market heavily in Asia. That pumps tens of thousands of applications into the system, but they still only accept the same small set of 100-200 international students each year.
Admissions rate goes from 30% to 7% on the backs of international students who are just grabbing a raffle ticket. USNews and parents are now so impressed how competitive the school has become.
There is a reason why Colby doesn't generate a CDS. Other SLACs play this game as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish there was some breakdown of this data as it applies to ED to get a more realistic sense of odds. My understanding is that a lot of international applications at meets need schools come in ED. But those students are often denied/deferred, which skews the admit rates. It would be interesting to see domestic ED admit rates.
ED schools should never be considered when evaluating based on acceptance rates.
Anonymous wrote:I wish there was some breakdown of this data as it applies to ED to get a more realistic sense of odds. My understanding is that a lot of international applications at meets need schools come in ED. But those students are often denied/deferred, which skews the admit rates. It would be interesting to see domestic ED admit rates.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious about something I haven't heard discussed much here or elsewhere - I noticed that total acceptance rates are not always what they appear to be if you're looking at SLAC's as a domestic applicant, whereas the total acceptance rate is roughly the same as the domestic acceptance rate at top national universities. I wonder whether this pattern holds true at the other SLAC's, but most of them do not make it available (Williams, Pomona, Swarthmore, Middlebury, for example). Anyone know more about this?
Here's an example for universities and SLAC's that do report this (calculated from 2024-2025 CDS, rounded to nearest whole percent).
Princeton:
Total acceptance rate: 5%
Domestic: 5%
International: 2%
Vanderbilt:
Total acceptance rate: 6%
Domestic: 6%
International: 4%
Johns Hopkins:
Total acceptance rate: 6%
Domestic: 7%
International: 1%
Amherst:
Total acceptance rate: 9%
Domestic: 14%
International: 3%
Bowdoin:
Total acceptance rate: 7%
Domestic: 11%
International: 1%