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Posted Sun, 04/03/2011 - 17:44 by Fishville

Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, Photo Courtesy: Fishville

By Kristina Dell; The Daily Beast, March 30, 2011

At 5 p.m. today, Ivy League schools will notify their lucky applicants—the precious few admitted in the toughest admissions year ever. From soaring waitlists to a Southern boom, Kristina Dell on 10 trends.

The toughest college admissions year on record is reaching its apex this week as nervous seniors obsessively check their email or a website to discover their fates. (Waiting for the fat or thin envelope? So 2005.) The hotter-than-ever Ivy League schools, which all had a record number of applicants this year, will notify the lucky ones at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

It has been an especially stressful process this year. The weak economy and a wider acceptance of the common application—Columbia used it for the first time this year and had a 32 percent jump in applicants over last year—has meant the competition is steeper than ever. Over the past five years, applications to the eight Ivy League schools plus MIT and Stanford skyrocketed from just over 200,000 applications to almost 300,000 early and regular applications, for a total increase of more than 40 percent, according to Michele Hernandez, president of Hernandez College Consulting.

 

So more families have started to take a long-term approach to the college admissions process. For many, the endgame isn’t college; it’s graduate school. Some are considering sending their kids to top-notch state schools to save tens of thousands of dollars with the idea that Stanford or Yale will make a great graduate school. Others are searching for programs that allow a student to go to school for six years and gain a B.A. plus a J.D. to save a year of time and tuition. Whitman, Hamilton, Occidental, and Bowdoin have such programs.

5) Applicants From Technology Havens Have the Admissions Edge

Schools like to say geography doesn’t matter, but if you’re from a technology haven like Seattle, Palo Alto, or San Jose, you just might have a subtle advantage. “Good high schools in tech hubs are getting in more kids to top schools than they used to,” says Montesano of College Match, who cites liberal arts feeder schools like Lakeside School in Seattle and Katharine Branson School in Marin County as having that edge. Why the leg up? “It’s nothing more than colleges wanting kids whose families are tech people, especially if they work for blue-chip tech firms," he says. "Google is the future, and they want kids from those families.”

6) The Waitlist Is Huge This Year

“With Harvard and Princeton not having early admissions, the yield is all over the place, so thewaitlist will be used a lot,” says Hernandez of Hernandez College Consulting. “The waitlist will have a lot of movement.” But it’s not just the Ivies: “We have to expand the size of the waitlist because we are accepting more non-resident students and you can get wider fluctuations with this group,” says Philip Ballinger, assistant vice president for enrollment and director of admissions at the University of Washington. Expect students to send lots of followup letters and have their advisers call the admissions officers to boost their chances.

7) More Applicants Are Interested in Creative Writing

OMG! More high school students this year are interested in writing and want to choose schools where they can do more of it, says Montesano. “We have more clients than ever who want to build up creative-writing portfolios,” he says, “so they’re looking at colleges like Sarah Lawrence for creative writing and Vassar and Occidental for screenwriting.” Many have spent the summer between their sophomore and junior years at writing workshops to hone their skills.

Apparently, the increased interest in writing has resulted in better college essays, at least for some schools. “I do think the writing skills have improved,” says Miller of Brown. “Or maybe it’s the editing skills,” he jokes.

8) Homeschoolers Are on the Rise

“We see a lot of homeschoolers now,” says Miller, who notes that these students are often hard to compare to others because their curricula vary so much. “It’s a big movement.” Still, things can get a little bit awkward when teacher recommendations are requested and they end up coming from the student’s parents—something that happens all the time. “I read one recommendation from a student’s mother that said, ‘He is one of the best students I’ve ever taught,’ and I laughed because the kid is an only child,” he says.

9) More Californians Are Applying Out of State

With budget cuts at many state schools, some high school seniors are looking further afield for college. “Students are applying to more colleges out of state, especially California students because of the strain on the higher education system there,” says Eric J. Furda, dean of admissions at University of Pennsylvania. He notes that Penn saw fewer applicants from Pennsylvania and the Mid-Atlantic area this year.

10) Public Schools Are Accepting More Out-of-State Students

Not only do they need the higher tuition rates of out-of-state students, but public universities also are enrolling more non-resident students to boost numbers without requiring extra housing. In the past, “the public universities on the West Coast have been almost exclusively reserved for residents of the state on the undergraduate level,” says Ballinger of the University of Washington. “But Berkeley, the University of Washington, and others have made it clear they have to enroll more non-resident students.”

Kristina Dell is an editor at Newsweek.com and runs the education website. Previously, she wrote for Time magazine. Her stories have also appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and Reader's Digest.

 

Information provided by:

HYP Pathway(雅美途)

St. Louis, Missouri, USA.

An Expert on College Admission in the United States.

E-mail: [email protected]; Website: 雅美途