Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents I know feel like no one ever gets in w/o being a recruit, so it's not worth the time to do the application.
Yale just announced a record high applicant pool at nearly 50,000 RD apps, and Duke and Yale have about the same acceptance rate. Wonder why Yale wouldn't have experienced a drop in applicants too.
Duke is in the south which is MAGA - supremacist country.
Yale is in Connecticut, which is fine.
Duke itself is quite liberal, but I imagine some people are turned off by North Carolina's politics. New Haven is not a fun college town though.
No, New Haven is no one's idea of paradise.
And the research triangle - Duke, UNC Chapel Hill, NC State - is quite liberal.
Not sure why exactly Duke experienced the drop in applications. But don't think it's politics or region. It might very well be that Coach K is no longer there. For real.
Duke basketball is still top 10 in the nation, and they have the #1 recruiting class for next year though. But agreed Coach K is a celebrity. Perhaps Duke needs to get a national championship with their new coach to build the notoriety around their program again.
Anonymous wrote:Tulane's RD applications were also down. Maybe it has something to do with the southern school's getting a bit less popular after the covid surge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents I know feel like no one ever gets in w/o being a recruit, so it's not worth the time to do the application.
Yale just announced a record high applicant pool at nearly 50,000 RD apps, and Duke and Yale have about the same acceptance rate. Wonder why Yale wouldn't have experienced a drop in applicants too.
Because apparently cold, slightly depressing New England towns are the new Southern school!
Anonymous wrote:For better or worse, Duke no longer has the preppy, country club, lax bro image. Some students now see Duke more like UChicago, WUSTL, Emory, MIT - all great schools, but not fun like other expensive, popular, private schools such as UMiami, Tulane, BC, Wake Forest and Vandy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents I know feel like no one ever gets in w/o being a recruit, so it's not worth the time to do the application.
Yale just announced a record high applicant pool at nearly 50,000 RD apps, and Duke and Yale have about the same acceptance rate. Wonder why Yale wouldn't have experienced a drop in applicants too.
Duke is in the south which is MAGA - supremacist country.
Yale is in Connecticut, which is fine.
Duke itself is quite liberal, but I imagine some people are turned off by North Carolina's politics. New Haven is not a fun college town though.
No, New Haven is no one's idea of paradise.
And the research triangle - Duke, UNC Chapel Hill, NC State - is quite liberal.
Not sure why exactly Duke experienced the drop in applications. But don't think it's politics or region. It might very well be that Coach K is no longer there. For real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents I know feel like no one ever gets in w/o being a recruit, so it's not worth the time to do the application.
Yale just announced a record high applicant pool at nearly 50,000 RD apps, and Duke and Yale have about the same acceptance rate. Wonder why Yale wouldn't have experienced a drop in applicants too.
Duke is in the south which is MAGA - supremacist country.
Yale is in Connecticut, which is fine.
Duke itself is quite liberal, but I imagine some people are turned off by North Carolina's politics. New Haven is not a fun college town though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents I know feel like no one ever gets in w/o being a recruit, so it's not worth the time to do the application.
Yale just announced a record high applicant pool at nearly 50,000 RD apps, and Duke and Yale have about the same acceptance rate. Wonder why Yale wouldn't have experienced a drop in applicants too.
Duke is in the south which is MAGA - supremacist country.
Yale is in Connecticut, which is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents I know feel like no one ever gets in w/o being a recruit, so it's not worth the time to do the application.
Yale just announced a record high applicant pool at nearly 50,000 RD apps, and Duke and Yale have about the same acceptance rate. Wonder why Yale wouldn't have experienced a drop in applicants too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tulane's RD applications were also down. Maybe it has something to do with the southern school's getting a bit less popular after the covid surge.
Lol, no. Southern schools are red hot right now and more competitive than ever. I think people just have given up on some of these Ivy+ schools RD.
I think that's true. Duke, Vanderbilt, Rice, and Emory all remain very desirable schools. And I don't think Georgia Tech and the SEC schools are lacking in applicants.
For the better schools, applicants shoot their shot in the ED round. And if that doesn't work out, they take a gander at the sub 5 percent admittance rate in Regular Decision, and they think why bother. And they move on to schools where the odds are better.
I don't think it's a Southern thing. Apps to Harvard are way down this year. It's a market reaction to the randomness of things over the past few years. Covid. Test Optional. DEI priorities. A general awareness of the advantages of legacy, recruited athletes, wealth, connections. And as a result, unhooked applicants don't bother lighting $95 on fire anymore in the RD round.
Why Harvard and Duke in particular are experiencing such a drop in applicants is a little mystifying. MIT and Vanderbilt don't seem to be having the same issues. But generally, students and families are being more strategic in both how and where they apply.
Harvard and Duke seem out of reach for randoms from the burbs, no matter their qualifications. Whereas maybe MIT and Vanderbilt still seem accessible for bright kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tulane's RD applications were also down. Maybe it has something to do with the southern school's getting a bit less popular after the covid surge.
Lol, no. Southern schools are red hot right now and more competitive than ever. I think people just have given up on some of these Ivy+ schools RD.
Anonymous wrote:Coming from New York, Duke is still a hot school for top prep school kids, it's just really hard to get in. They'll take big name kids or exceptionally smart kids, with little space in between. It's always worth a shot to apply though, so it's sad to see people giving up hope.