Anonymous
Post 11/17/2023 13:56     Subject: Re:ED/EA applications: record # for class of 2028?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:According to DeanJ, there are about 4,500 ED apps to UVA this year. There were 4,250 last year, so about 5% increase.


Where did she say that? And did she break down in and out of state?


Yesterday during her live Q&A. No breakdown IS vs OOS. EA pool is also larger vs last year.


Thanks! I looked for yesterday’s live and couldn’t find it


I don’t think she saved the live like she usually does. I wonder if it was a mistake.

It's there. https://www.instagram.com/reel/CzuGsBtO5XZ/


Thanks! I got to this from your link but it still doesn't show up with the others
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2023 11:20     Subject: ED/EA applications: record # for class of 2028?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:https://www.insidehighered.com/news/admissions/traditional-age/2023/11/16/early-admissions-data-show-big-bump-applications

Pull quote: "Preliminary data from the Common App—which counts about one-third of America’s four-year undergraduate institutions as members—show a sharp increase in applications submitted before Nov. 1, a jump of 41 percent over the 2019–20 application cycle."

Thank you. Adding:

"Robert Massa, vice president emeritus for enrollment at Dickinson College, said he was struck by the size of the application surge. But he cautioned that it may reflect the growing popularity of early action and early decision—and increased pressure on students to apply to a longer list of colleges—rather than portend a comparable spike in enrollments next year."


Also, the increase is driven by applications from non-white students and applications to schools with a 50%+ acceptance rate. Common App has been working to get more MSIs and large public universities onboard, which seems to be working. Applications to more selective schools have leveled off.

I may have missed this - did the article specifically say this?


Yes, quoted source.


Oops, the OP said paraphrased source:

“ In 2020–21 that growth largely affected selective institutions that were test optional for the first time, drawing more interested applicants from a wider pool. This fall, growth at the highly selective echelon has leveled off, and the most significant increases have been at institutions with acceptance rates of 50 percent or higher.”

Interestingly, this quote seems to contradict another one: "Massa said he’s seen an explosion of interest in early applications, primarily for highly selective institutions but increasingly across the access spectrum."


Yeah, that quote was a little hard to pin down, given its placement. I took it to be a more general statement, not specific to this year’s data.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2023 11:12     Subject: ED/EA applications: record # for class of 2028?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:https://www.insidehighered.com/news/admissions/traditional-age/2023/11/16/early-admissions-data-show-big-bump-applications

Pull quote: "Preliminary data from the Common App—which counts about one-third of America’s four-year undergraduate institutions as members—show a sharp increase in applications submitted before Nov. 1, a jump of 41 percent over the 2019–20 application cycle."

Thank you. Adding:

"Robert Massa, vice president emeritus for enrollment at Dickinson College, said he was struck by the size of the application surge. But he cautioned that it may reflect the growing popularity of early action and early decision—and increased pressure on students to apply to a longer list of colleges—rather than portend a comparable spike in enrollments next year."


Also, the increase is driven by applications from non-white students and applications to schools with a 50%+ acceptance rate. Common App has been working to get more MSIs and large public universities onboard, which seems to be working. Applications to more selective schools have leveled off.

I may have missed this - did the article specifically say this?


Yes, quoted source.


Oops, the OP said paraphrased source:

“ In 2020–21 that growth largely affected selective institutions that were test optional for the first time, drawing more interested applicants from a wider pool. This fall, growth at the highly selective echelon has leveled off, and the most significant increases have been at institutions with acceptance rates of 50 percent or higher.”

Interestingly, this quote seems to contradict another one: "Massa said he’s seen an explosion of interest in early applications, primarily for highly selective institutions but increasingly across the access spectrum."

To add, perhaps the leveling-off comment refers to growth at highly selectives anticipated for the entire admission season, including RD, whereas the explosion quote refers specifically to early apps.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2023 11:10     Subject: ED/EA applications: record # for class of 2028?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:https://www.insidehighered.com/news/admissions/traditional-age/2023/11/16/early-admissions-data-show-big-bump-applications

Pull quote: "Preliminary data from the Common App—which counts about one-third of America’s four-year undergraduate institutions as members—show a sharp increase in applications submitted before Nov. 1, a jump of 41 percent over the 2019–20 application cycle."

Thank you. Adding:

"Robert Massa, vice president emeritus for enrollment at Dickinson College, said he was struck by the size of the application surge. But he cautioned that it may reflect the growing popularity of early action and early decision—and increased pressure on students to apply to a longer list of colleges—rather than portend a comparable spike in enrollments next year."


Also, the increase is driven by applications from non-white students and applications to schools with a 50%+ acceptance rate. Common App has been working to get more MSIs and large public universities onboard, which seems to be working. Applications to more selective schools have leveled off.

I may have missed this - did the article specifically say this?


Yes, quoted source.


Oops, the OP said paraphrased source:

“ In 2020–21 that growth largely affected selective institutions that were test optional for the first time, drawing more interested applicants from a wider pool. This fall, growth at the highly selective echelon has leveled off, and the most significant increases have been at institutions with acceptance rates of 50 percent or higher.”

Interestingly, this quote seems to contradict another one: "Massa said he’s seen an explosion of interest in early applications, primarily for highly selective institutions but increasingly across the access spectrum."
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2023 09:28     Subject: Re:ED/EA applications: record # for class of 2028?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:According to DeanJ, there are about 4,500 ED apps to UVA this year. There were 4,250 last year, so about 5% increase.


Where did she say that? And did she break down in and out of state?


Yesterday during her live Q&A. No breakdown IS vs OOS. EA pool is also larger vs last year.


Thanks! I looked for yesterday’s live and couldn’t find it


I don’t think she saved the live like she usually does. I wonder if it was a mistake.

It's there. https://www.instagram.com/reel/CzuGsBtO5XZ/
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2023 09:17     Subject: ED/EA applications: record # for class of 2028?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:https://www.insidehighered.com/news/admissions/traditional-age/2023/11/16/early-admissions-data-show-big-bump-applications

Pull quote: "Preliminary data from the Common App—which counts about one-third of America’s four-year undergraduate institutions as members—show a sharp increase in applications submitted before Nov. 1, a jump of 41 percent over the 2019–20 application cycle."

Thank you. Adding:

"Robert Massa, vice president emeritus for enrollment at Dickinson College, said he was struck by the size of the application surge. But he cautioned that it may reflect the growing popularity of early action and early decision—and increased pressure on students to apply to a longer list of colleges—rather than portend a comparable spike in enrollments next year."


Also, the increase is driven by applications from non-white students and applications to schools with a 50%+ acceptance rate. Common App has been working to get more MSIs and large public universities onboard, which seems to be working. Applications to more selective schools have leveled off.

I may have missed this - did the article specifically say this?


Yes, quoted source.


Oops, the OP said paraphrased source:

“ In 2020–21 that growth largely affected selective institutions that were test optional for the first time, drawing more interested applicants from a wider pool. This fall, growth at the highly selective echelon has leveled off, and the most significant increases have been at institutions with acceptance rates of 50 percent or higher.”