Anonymous wrote:I'm curious, do schools of moderate selectivity (e.g. Willamette, Loyola MD, Rose-Hulman) end up on this list because they miscalculated their yield? I assume they don't hold a set number of freshman and/or transfer spots open for late applicants...
Anonymous wrote:I was happy to see several colleges on this list for my current junior who has a below-average GPA by DCUM standards (3.3). Works hard but not in the running for a top college. My question about this list is whether those schools accept most students during the regular round. I am talking about the schools on that list that have a 60-80% acceptance rate. How do those schools reject 20-40% of applicants if they then have spots left in May? There are good schools on this list: St. Joe's, Ithaca, Sewanee, NAU, ASU. Those are schools that kids can go to and get a solid education and name recognition of sorts. What I am hoping is that it means by DC has a good chance of getting into these types of schools during the regular admissions process if they end up still having spots in May of Senior year. TIA!
Anonymous wrote:Sewanee, Wooster, St. John’s in Annapolis are all on this list. This furthers my belief that many LACs will have problems in the future, even good ones.
Anonymous wrote:Op clearly you have a narrative you are trying to advance. We see through it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sewanee, Wooster, St. John’s in Annapolis are all on this list. This furthers my belief that many LACs will have problems in the future, even good ones.
This year acceptance rates at top SLACS:
Williams 7.5%
Amherst 9%
Bowdoin 7%
Swarthmore 7.46%
Seems like many SLACs have no worries.
Anonymous wrote:Sewanee, Wooster, St. John’s in Annapolis are all on this list. This furthers my belief that many LACs will have problems in the future, even good ones.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, many of these schools are willing to take chances on kids, but if they don't think a kid can be successful, they'll reject.
A lot of good schools on the list. With the FAFSA debacle, it's been a really wild year in admissions. It wouldn't surprise me if more good schools than usual wind up with major openings.
Anonymous wrote:Sewanee, Wooster, St. John’s in Annapolis are all on this list. This furthers my belief that many LACs will have problems in the future, even good ones.