Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will be very curious to see yield rates this year. These acceptance numbers are insane. There can’t possibly be that many prospective freshmen.
I think yields will come down across the board for everyone but the top 5 or so schools. Not enough acceptances to go around and it's the same people who keep getting admitted. Predicting a lot of wait-list activity. No way is what happened this year sustainable for the future without upping the reliance on ED
Couldn't it just be deluge of international and illegal immigrant applicants?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will be very curious to see yield rates this year. These acceptance numbers are insane. There can’t possibly be that many prospective freshmen.
I think yields will come down across the board for everyone but the top 5 or so schools. Not enough acceptances to go around and it's the same people who keep getting admitted. Predicting a lot of wait-list activity. No way is what happened this year sustainable for the future without upping the reliance on ED
Anonymous wrote:Will be very curious to see yield rates this year. These acceptance numbers are insane. There can’t possibly be that many prospective freshmen.
Anonymous wrote:Will be very curious to see yield rates this year. These acceptance numbers are insane. There can’t possibly be that many prospective freshmen.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, you're right. I misread it to mean they didn't release decisions yet, but that was the acceptance rate they had determined. Sorry about that.
Anonymous wrote:The article is 2018 acceptance rates as reported by the admissions office (as the source notes). Tufts's acceptance rate must have not changed much this year. Apps only went 2% while others saw 6-18%.
http://now.tufts.edu/articles/record-number-applications
Anonymous wrote:But the interesting (and unknowable) factor is how many of these schools are admitting the same students. The more that every student applies to more and more reach, match, and safety schools, it seems to me that more and more will end up getting admitted to the same schools. But they can only attend one. So, maybe the schools are not not actually getting more selective it’s just that more applicants are applying. For example, if previously kids only applied to two “top” schools and now are applying to all 10 or 20 or whatever the school will seem more selective, but in fact you just end up with more randomness which leads to more applications the following year. And so the vicious circle continues.
There’s probably a math answer to this but I can’t be bothered to figure it out.