College Admissions: Ivy League Remains Elusive for Class of 2018
Monday, March 31, 2014
Ivy League Selectivity
Here are the statistics for the Ivy League class of 2018, in order of selectivity:
• Harvard University — 5.9% of 34,295 applicants were accepted
• Yale University — 6.26% of 30,922 applicants were accepted
• Columbia University — 6.945% of 32,952 applicants were accepted
• Princeton University — 7.28% of 26,607 applicants were accepted
• Brown University — 8.6% of 30,291 applicants were accepted
• University of Pennsylvania — 9.9% of 35,788 applicants were accepted
• Dartmouth College — 11.5% of 19,235 applicants were accepted
• Cornell University — 14% of 43,041 applicants were accepted
While there were not a lot of big surprises on the surface, the story is different when you pull back the covers on admissions and dive into the profile of the entering classes. Then, you begin to see what elite colleges look for as they strive to diversify their campuses. At Harvard this year 11.9% of accepted students are African American, 13% are Hispanic, 19.7% Asian-American, 1.9% Native American or Native Hawaiian and 10.5% are international. At Brown, admitted students hailed from all 50 states and 88 countries around the globe; 18% will be the first in their family to attend college and 46% are students of color. More than 50% of students at Ivy League colleges will apply for financial aid, and at wealthier universities like Harvard and Yale, families earning $65,000 and $80,000 respectively will get a full ride with no loans to pay back. While 9.4% of Princeton acceptances went to the children of alumni, the Ivy League is working hard to shed its image as a bastion of privilege and white America.
Outside the Ivy League
Looking at acceptance rates below 20% across the country: Stanford edged out Harvard with an acceptance rate of just 5.1%, and MIT remained highly selective with just 7.7% of applicants offered a spot in the class of 2018. Amherst College took just 12.8% of applicants, Bowdoin 14.9%, Duke 10.7%, Johns Hopkins 15%, Harvey Mudd 13.2%, Middlebury 17.4%, Northwestern 12.9%, Olin 10.2%, Pomona 12.2%, USC 17.8% and Vanderbilt 11%.
The good news is that while we tend to focus on the most competitive colleges in the media at this time of year, there are more than 3,200 colleges in the U.S. and most remain highly accessible to students. The real key is finding the right fit for each student from an academic, social and extra-curricular perspective.
Cristiana Quinn, M.Ed. is the founder of College Admission Advisors, LLC which provides strategic, college counseling and athletic recruiting services for students. www.collegeadvisorsonline.com.
Related Slideshow: New England Colleges With the Best Undergraduate Teaching
U.S. News & World Report released a survey conducted in 2013 of college administrators on the best schools for undergraduate teaching. Several New England made their lists for best National Universities, Liberal Arts Colleges, and Regional Universities. See which schools made the lists in the slides below:
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