Anonymous wrote:If you go to college confidential you can go back to posts from their origin.
You can see people claiming “it’s different this year!” Every single year.
Does that mean it is NOT different now? No, that is not evidence of that. But for perspective…[/quo
Number of applicants have increased substantially year after year. Admission rates have gone down. So yes, every year is different and it is tougher now more than ever.
Anonymous wrote:My first graduated in 2022 and admissions was like Dantes inferno. Covid era test optional and a DEI craze opened a new level of hell. Probably last normal year was 2020.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think last year was the most comparable year; and this year is worse. I think next year will be even worse - but the year after should be better.
Why next year worse?
Because the applicant pool will be even higher. I believe that it isn't until the class of 2026 or 2027 when the applicant pool will decline (around 2008, during the recession, the number of babies born declined substantially).
WOW!
+1 the number of juniors this year is approx 20% higher than seniors in Maryland public schools, for example.
Anonymous wrote:My first graduated in 2022 and admissions was like Dantes inferno. Covid era test optional and a DEI craze opened a new level of hell. Probably last normal year was 2020.
Anonymous wrote:20/21 was when everything changed. Those admitted in 2020 all got in by the usual metrics. Schools shut down in February/March of 2020. Seniors that year missed prom and graduation and most of the last few months of their high school experience. But the college application process remained the same. Everyone needed to submit their test scores. Everyone had their ECs. GPAs tended to reflect genuine academic merit.
It was the next class - those that graduated in 2021 - when everything changed. For those kids - particularly the public school students - school effectively stopped midway through junior year. No in person school. No extracurriculars. No sports. No SAT or ACT. The public schools remained 'virtual" for an absolutely criminal amount of time. All grades were now inflated. In retrospect, it was absurd and ridiculous and I will never forgive the politicians and teachers unions responsible for throwing kids under the bus.
But that was the year when everything changed. There is before and after.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only Class of 2027. And for URM students: all previous years are irrelevant.
Every single year someone posts how much worse this year was compared to last. It’s not different it’s just still a crapshoot and that’s not new. 2022, 2023, 2024 all working with the same TO situation and everyone had some online HS. It’s interesting that next year will be the first cycle with kids who did not have their HS classes online due to Covid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think last year was the most comparable year; and this year is worse. I think next year will be even worse - but the year after should be better.
Why next year worse?
Because the applicant pool will be even higher. I believe that it isn't until the class of 2026 or 2027 when the applicant pool will decline (around 2008, during the recession, the number of babies born declined substantially).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think last year was the most comparable year; and this year is worse. I think next year will be even worse - but the year after should be better.
Why next year worse?
Anonymous wrote:I think last year was the most comparable year; and this year is worse. I think next year will be even worse - but the year after should be better.