Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:... I would think that an applicant with all of these qualifications but and had to overcome adversity of some kind would stand out. I don't know really know how else an applicant from a middle-high income family can stand out these days.
Yes, if you're deciding between two applicants with essentially interchangeable stats (GPA, SAT, APs, etc), wouldn't you want to pick the one who accomplished those things despite a more difficult path?
It's sort of like picking Ginger Rogers over Fred Astaire, because she did everything he did ... but backwards and in heels.

Anonymous wrote:... I would think that an applicant with all of these qualifications but and had to overcome adversity of some kind would stand out. I don't know really know how else an applicant from a middle-high income family can stand out these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure if I am articulating my question clearly, so please humor me, but if you account for all of the extra "randomly fired off" applications that do not fall within the Ivy's selection profile, then is the selectivity still dramatically different than it was 20 years ago? In the 80's was the applicant pool largely comprised of qualified students? I guess that I am curious about the acceptance rate for applicants that mirror the profile of the current freshman class.
I think I understand. You're asking whether the accepted student profile has gotten measurably stronger, I think. In other words, would a student admitted in the 1980s (30-35 years ago!) still be admitted today? It's a hard question, but I think the best way to answer might be to look at the average SAT scores for admitted students. Have they changed significantly. or are they still roughly the same? That's not a perfect answer, but it might give a good estimate.
25th percentile of 2013 incoming class (verbal/math) = 710/710
25th percentile of 1985 incoming class = 620/640
75th percentile of 2013 incoming class = 800/790
75th percentile of 1985 incoming class = 720/730
Definitely a significant increase in SAT scores of attending students. Some of that might be attributable to the SAT "recentering" that occurred in the mid-1990s, but surely not all of it.
FWIW, of 1359 matriculating students ...
55% of matriculants came from public high schools.
45% of matriculants came from independent, parochial, and other schools.
14% of matriculants were children of Yale alumni.
Total University Enrollments* (non-International):
Black or African American: 8%
American Indian/Alaska Native: 2%
Asian: 17%
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander: <1%
Hispanic of any race: 8%
White: 62%
Race/ethnicity unknown: 3%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my husband and I are very successful (Ivy degrees, etc.). He made partner in Big Law. Our kids are confident and gifted. They are not afraid of competition and they will be winners.
With an attitude like that I feel sorry for your kids. "Winners"? Really?![]()
1st pp is a troll, from a non-English speaking country. 2nd pp is just gullible
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my husband and I are very successful (Ivy degrees, etc.). He made partner in Big Law. Our kids are confident and gifted. They are not afraid of competition and they will be winners.
With an attitude like that I feel sorry for your kids. "Winners"? Really?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Both my husband and I are very successful (Ivy degrees, etc.). He made partner in Big Law. Our kids are confident and gifted. They are not afraid of competition and they will be winners.
Anonymous wrote:Both my husband and I are very successful (Ivy degrees, etc.). He made partner in Big Law. Our kids are confident and gifted. They are not afraid of competition and they will be winners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There isn't anything new here except more applications, lower admit rates, more schools in the single digit zone. Not a great article. No analysis of legacy trends or foreign student applications and admits.
It's news to plenty of people. For example, someone in their 40s might have read that Yale has a 6% acceptance rate but not have realized that the rate was 20%+ when they applied in the 1980s. The historical overview, even in summary fashion, is helpful to put this issue in perspective.
Right. There are plenty of Ivy grads who might not make the cut today, but are wholly unaware of how the odds have changed over a generation.
But that really doesnt matter because legacy admission means their offsprings can still get in relatively easy.