Yale released admissions decisions
for the class of 2018 Thursday afternoon, accepting 1,935 students from an
applicant pool of 30,932 — an acceptance rate of 6.26 percent. Last year, the
University offered seats to more students, accepting 1,991 from a smaller pool
of 29,610 applicants, making for an acceptance rate of 6.72 percent. After
hovering around 7.5 percent from 2009 to 2011, Yale’s acceptance rate has now
remained in the 6 percent range for three consecutive years.This was the first
year Dean Jeremiah Quinlan’s signature has appeared on Yale’s admissions
letters. Quinlan succeeded Dean Jeffrey Brenzel in July 2013. “In my first year
as the admissions dean, I am inspired by Yale’s extraordinary applicant pool
but also humbled by the challenging selection process we have just completed,”
Quinlan said in an email. Quinlan said Yale and its peer schools have seen
application numbers rise and the applicant pool grow stronger over the past
five years. This year’s group of admitted students includes more students from
“virtually every underrepresented group in higher education,” he said. Although
the University could not offer seats to a large number of talented applicants,
Quinlan said virtually all of these students will thrive at other selective
institutions.
For the first time, in June 2013, Yale used tailored mailing to a select
group of 16,000 rising high school seniors who are members of low-income
families. The mailing emphasized that households with less than $65,000 in
annual income are not asked to make any parental contributions to their child’s
Yale education. According to Dunn, the mailing campaign was supplemented by an
email campaign and a new page on the admissions office’s website highlighting
the affordability of a Yale education.
Dunn said it is too early for the office to measure the success of the new
mailing initiative, adding that the office will conduct a thorough analysis of
the feedback submitted by applicants, admits and eventual matriculates in the
summer.
Amin Abdul-Malik Gonzalez, an associate director of the admissions office
and co-director of multicultural recruitment, said the University’s success in
reaching students from underrepresented backgrounds is attributable to the
combined efforts of admissions staff, dedicated alumni and current Yale
undergraduates. He also cited the University’s ongoing partnerships with
College Horizons and QuestBridge — two organizations that support the
educational ambitions of high-achieving students from low-income backgrounds —
as examples of ways in which Yale is encouraging a more diverse applicant pool.
Richard Avitabile, a former admissions officer at New York University and a
private college counselor, said universities’ acceptance rates are only useful
in evaluating the merits of institutions when used selectively and with a
long-term approach. Still, he added that he would be interested in seeing
Dartmouth’s numbers because the college has seen two consecutive years of fewer
applicants — an exception to the broader trend of rising application numbers
across selective institutions.
Jim Patterson, associate dean of Harvard-Westlake, a private school in Los
Angeles, said his students are increasingly realizing the flaws of choosing a
school based on its acceptance rate or place on a college rankings list.
“Students are becoming savvier and they’re realizing that what is a good fit
for one student may not be a great fit for another,” Patterson said.
Jon Reider, director of college counseling at San Francisco University High
School, said these acceptance rates will continue to decline as more students
realize the financial accessibility of these colleges and apply.
Patterson echoed Reider’s sentiment, adding that more international students
will look to American colleges as budget cuts hurt public universities abroad,
especially in Europe.
Accepted students took to social media platforms such as Facebook and
Twitter to share the news, posting updates rejoicing or lamenting their
admissions outcomes. The popular college forum College Confidential experienced
technical failures as enthusiastic students from across the globe logged on to
share results and discuss the news.
“I was at home on the computer with my dad and we both jumped up when we saw
the Bulldog with the congratulations,” said Thomas Pan, a high school senior
from Livingston, New Jersey. Pan added that he never considered being accepted
to Yale as a possibility.
Sam Cheng, a high school senior from Connecticut, said he was so excited
when he read his acceptance letter that he threw the pen he was holding against
the wall. Still, Cheng said he is currently deciding between Princeton and
Yale.
Students have until May 1 to respond to their admissions offers.
http://yaledailynews.com/blog/2014/03/27/6-26-percent-of-applicants-admitted-to-class-of-2018/