Anonymous wrote:409 students (out of 598 total enrolled freshman) are admitted Early Decision.
That's 68% of the freshman class.
Only 2,738 students attend Middlebury, with 400 of them off the books for admissions stats purposes because they are the "February" admits.
200 of the 2738 were handpicked from the waitlist, preserving yield and circumventing need blind admissions.
Schools like Middlebury are struggling to attract high achieving student.
Only 41 freshman out of 500 scored above a 1530 on the SAT.
Middlebury is increasingly having to enroll low achieving students as it battles its financial problems.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly who would want to pay all that money for public school class sizes? Shouldn’t the small class sizes be the draw of a place like that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Professor of Political Science Jessica Teet’s Authoritarian Politics class. The class had 18 students when it was taught in fall 2021, and last fall taught 54 students, nine greater than its target capacity of 45. It is common for professors to allow more students into classes than allotted by the original enrollment cap."
https://www.middleburycampus.com/article/2025/10/large-class-sizes-impact-faculty-student-experience
Moving from 18 to 54 students for that class is a HUGE jump.
Fad course that will be unpopular in a couple years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should increase. Nothing wrong with making education accessible to more students.
There is if increasing enrollment & increasing the number of students in each class if it dilutes the quality of the education.
Anonymous wrote:409 students (out of 598 total enrolled freshman) are admitted Early Decision.
That's 68% of the freshman class.
Only 2,738 students attend Middlebury, with 400 of them off the books for admissions stats purposes because they are the "February" admits.
200 of the 2738 were handpicked from the waitlist, preserving yield and circumventing need blind admissions.
Schools like Middlebury are struggling to attract high achieving student.
Only 41 freshman out of 500 scored above a 1530 on the SAT.
Middlebury is increasingly having to enroll low achieving students as it battles its financial problems.
Anonymous wrote:They should increase. Nothing wrong with making education accessible to more students.
Anonymous wrote:The average class size at Middlebury is 16 students. Some classes have more. Some have fewer. I don't understand why there are 9 pages of comments about this.
Anonymous wrote:The difference between 35 is 20 students is a profound difference in the depth and quality of the feedback students will get from a professor on their essays or projects. This seems to be lost on many of the people here. I guess such people are used to multiple choice and fill in the blank assessments and can’t imagine any difference in these two scenarios except needing 15 more desks in a room.
Anonymous wrote:My DCs at different ivies have smaller classes than this, even as stem majors. How odd. Middlebury is not elite, should not be a T20 LAC. Move it down below Colby.