Welcome to COLLEGE BOUND, the blog of American College Strategies' Kathleen Griffin

Moving !!!

Thank you for visiting my blog.
Effective March 19th, 2012 this blog has been incorporated into our main website: www.AmericanCollegeStrategies.com

Thanks
Kathleen

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As an independent educational consultant I bring to the table a depth of experience gained from working with thousands of students and their parents from the middle school level all the way through high school.

You’ll now find my YouTube campus tour videos, blog and links to my Facebook page all under one roof at: American College Strategies.

Thanks for visiting. I hope you find my articles and videos informative and helpful in the pursuit of your college aspirations. Please come back often.

~~ Kathleen
Call me. 310 480 1040
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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Ivy League Admissions News Rolling In

Did you apply to an Ivy League school? Check out what Washington Post's Valerie Straus wrote...

Washington Post Reports on Ivy League Early Admission Process


Harvard’s Unofficial Early Admissions Process

Harvard University doesn’t have an official early admissions process, but some students still learn before everybody else whether they are being looked on with favor by the admissions folks.

Harvard's long standing practce of the unofficial Harvard nod is called indicators of admissions, according to Harvard College Admissions Dean William Fitzsimmons.  Other Ivy League institutions do it as well.  (The difference is that all of the others -- Columbia University, Yale University, the University of Pennsylvania, Cornell University, Dartmouth College and Brown University -- except one, Princeton University, have some official form of early admissions process.)


Harvard has no early action process which ended in 2007.  Harvard can unofficially let specific students know of their interest from Oct. 1 of any year through the following March 15.  The lack of a formal program has not, however, kept Harvard from letting certain students slip away to schools that do have formal early admissions processes. Many of the students are athletes who, Fitzsimmons said, are “being squeezed” by other school schools to accept an offer by a specific date.  But not all of them are athletes. Harvard officials sometimes “see individual applicants at schools here and there around the country who are particularly outstanding” and alert them that their application would be welcome, he said.

Sometimes students will approach Harvard and ask for some indication of whether they will be accepted. They are given one of three responses, he said: likely, possible or unlikely to be admitted. Likely responses essentially means a student will be admitted, assuming they don’t flunk out of senior year in high school.
Last year, he said, Harvard issued about 300 “likely” notifications. By way of contrast, Dartmouth College, for example, this year offered admission to 444 early decision applicants for this coming fall, 17 fewer than last year. Yale admitted 14.5 percent of its early action applicants for the class of 2015; of 5,257 early applicants, 761 were notified of their acceptances last month.

APPLICATIONS RISE FOR IVY LEAGUE SCHOOLS -

Valerie Straus, Washington Post, noted that this year’s early decision process has been especially tough for students applying to the country’s most elite colleges and universities. In some places, the competition has been tougher than ever.

Test-prep companies said they received a big bump in students in late December and early January -- kids who thought they would get into a college early decision but didn’t and decided to try to take the SAT or ACT one more time to lift their scores.  And some high schools have raised the number of colleges and universities to which they will allow students to apply because so many students didn’t get in during early decision.

Early-decision applications were up at many schools. The University of Michigan, for example, saw a spike of about 18% in applications; Bucknell University is up 30 percent; Lehigh University, 14 percent; Northwestern University, 26 percent; and Davidson College, a whopping 40 percent.
Part of the spike in applications is attributed to the Common Application, which makes it relatively easier to apply to many schools. And that makes it harder for admissions offices --- and for the high school seniors waiting to see where they will be going to college in the fall.

ENOUGH OF ALL THIS DATA.....IT CAN MAKE US ALL CRAZY!!!

My take on all this...
I am amazed that high school's actually limit the number of universities they ALLOW a student to apply to.  Is that true????  While I don't believe applying to 20 schools improves your chances....I'd be furious if my high school told me I could not apply as I've reached my max. 

THE BEST WAY TO IMPROVE YOUR CHANCES OF BEING ACCEPTED TO A UNIVERSITY IS TO DO WELL IN HIGH SCHOOL AND HAVE A STELLAR RESUME!

The best way to insure acceptance is to carefully choose what colleges you apply to.  Anyone with a 4.0 who only applies to Ivy League schools is not doing their homework and/or not being advised properly.  

Ivy League's have turned down thousands of perfect 4.0/2400 students.  Be smart...do your homework.  I'm not telling you not to apply to the Ivy League......but for heaven's sake, apply somewhere else, too.

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