On the Preference,
Office Pro Plus 2007 Key, we experiment with as often as we could — though probably not as much as we should — to remind applicants and their parents that there about 2,
Office Home And Business 2010 Key,000 four-year colleges in this country, and that most accept a sizable majority of those who apply.
In its annual “State of College Admission” report,
Cheap Windows 7, which is being released Wednesday afternoon, the National Association for College Admission Counseling has tallied a fresh statistic that underscores the above point: The average acceptance rate at four-year colleges and universities was 67 percent for last fall’s freshmen class.
For those families fixated around the nation’s most selective colleges — some of which accepted fewer than 10 percent of those who applied last year — such figures are probably of little comfort. But for others seeking to take a broader view, that 67 percent acceptance rate should be of some solace.
Surely, nearly everyone gets accepted by a worthy institution,
Office Pro 2007, though not necessarily by their first or even fifth choices. (Another scrap of data from the report, though not necessarily as reassuring: The percentage of students nationally who submitted seven or more applications reached 23 percent in 2009, up a percentage point from a year earlier.)
The report contains dozens of the most current measurements of the admissions process. But here’s another figure that is worth noting: Nearly one of every three colleges or universities (30 percent) experienced a decrease in applications in 2009. That is the largest proportion to experience such a drop since 1996. The authors of the report theorize that the sluggish economy is certainly a factor, with at least some applicants setting their sights on two-year colleges, at least initially.
One final statistic that seemed telling: Universities with early-admission programs continue to accept a higher percentage of applicants, on average, in those early rounds, with the chances of one’s being accepted early (as opposed to one’s chances in the regular pool) continuing to grow. For example, the acceptance rate among applicants, over all,
Office Standard 2010, under binding early-decision programs was 70 percent in 2009, compared with 55 percent in the main round. By contrast, those figures were 61 and 55 percent, respectively, in fall 2006.
What’s your response to the figures cited above? And if you’ve sifted through the report yourself, which numbers caught your eye, and why? Please use the comment box below to let us know.