Anonymous wrote:GU is TR. I dont think apps will rise much. Any additional applications will e from those not really serious about GU, without ED theres less room to yeild them out. Expect anywhere from 5-10k more applicants. So from 27k to about 35k applications. However yeild will drop. They accept around 3200 at about 50% yeild. If yeild drops to 40% they'll accept 4000. 4000/35000 is 11.4% pretty much the same as before. I could be wrong but I dont think much will change selectivity wise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My high school junior has Georgetown on the list of schools she is considering applying to for admission in fall 2027.
Starting next year, Georgetown will accept the Common Application. Until now, you had to apply specifically using the application on Georgetown's web site.
I have to think the number of applications will go up considerably next year, lowering the university's acceptance rate and making it appear even more selective than it already is.
My question is whether it will also make it HARDER to get accepted -- i.e., will the test scores of admitted students (Georgetown requires applicants to submit SAT or ACT scores) go up, will the GPA go up, will you need even more impressive extracurriculars, etc?
Thoughts?
Anything on this thread here from 2025?:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/30/1265335.page#29746303
Anonymous wrote:My high school junior has Georgetown on the list of schools she is considering applying to for admission in fall 2027.
Starting next year, Georgetown will accept the Common Application. Until now, you had to apply specifically using the application on Georgetown's web site.
I have to think the number of applications will go up considerably next year, lowering the university's acceptance rate and making it appear even more selective than it already is.
My question is whether it will also make it HARDER to get accepted -- i.e., will the test scores of admitted students (Georgetown requires applicants to submit SAT or ACT scores) go up, will the GPA go up, will you need even more impressive extracurriculars, etc?
Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Why does no one say it will turn in her test scores, gpa, class rank, rigor, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown moving to the Common App is odd. Why did the school do it? The Georgetown app seemed to provide the school with the kinds of applicants it wanted, while weeding out kids it didn’t want.
Now, the school will be getting thousands of more applications, but to what end? Are there applicants it wanted, but wasn’t getting? If so, who are they? And will the school get them?
It is possible that the admit rate will fall, but that the impact upon the kind of high stats applicant that Georgetown wants will be slight.
New President. It was the former President that said they’d never go to common app,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, forgot to answer the OP's question: yes, for sure it will increase the number of applications, especially if they keep their later deadline for submission. After awhile, high stats kids who are nervous about "how far they'll fall," especially after an ED deferral or rejection, are just throwing in another application because "why not" and removing the barrier of a different app will make Georgetown an even more popular choice.
So Georgetown is going from a school with self-selecting applicants to one that the Common App will enable kids to use as a backup?
Another Emory?
Sounds like a lower acceptance rate but a lower yield rate with more kids off the waitlist. Not sure how that helps Georgetown. But I can see why the school would have decided to go to the Common App instead of investing in improvements to the current application.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown moving to the Common App is odd. Why did the school do it? The Georgetown app seemed to provide the school with the kinds of applicants it wanted, while weeding out kids it didn’t want.
Now, the school will be getting thousands of more applications, but to what end? Are there applicants it wanted, but wasn’t getting? If so, who are they? And will the school get them?
It is possible that the admit rate will fall, but that the impact upon the kind of high stats applicant that Georgetown wants will be slight.
They needed to switch to the Common App. I have two kids who applied to Georgetown and their application is terrible. It is glitchy, doesn't load very quickly, you cannot "preview" a section until you've finished the whole thing, when you preview it, the checkmarks are on the wrong categories but it's just a glitchy thing, etc.
Importantly, it took up way more time to add all of the demographic info and to input essays. If I'm remembering correctly, they allow you to include only 6 activities (instead of Common App's 10) and have different word counts than the Common App. As another poster noted, it would not be worth the hassle if my kids didn't consider Georgetown one of the schools they really wanted to attend.
Just like all of the top schools, Georgetown wants more applicants so that they can show a lower acceptance rate and these days people want their kids to get into the most selective schools. Also, there is no reason they need a special app - they are a liberal arts school not MIT.
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown moving to the Common App is odd. Why did the school do it? The Georgetown app seemed to provide the school with the kinds of applicants it wanted, while weeding out kids it didn’t want.
Now, the school will be getting thousands of more applications, but to what end? Are there applicants it wanted, but wasn’t getting? If so, who are they? And will the school get them?
It is possible that the admit rate will fall, but that the impact upon the kind of high stats applicant that Georgetown wants will be slight.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, forgot to answer the OP's question: yes, for sure it will increase the number of applications, especially if they keep their later deadline for submission. After awhile, high stats kids who are nervous about "how far they'll fall," especially after an ED deferral or rejection, are just throwing in another application because "why not" and removing the barrier of a different app will make Georgetown an even more popular choice.