Early admit rate declines to 18.1 percent
University admits more students from a larger pool
Early admit rate declines to 18.1 percent
University admits more students from a larger pool
Friday, December 14, 2007
Posted Friday Dec. 14 Yale accepted 18.1 percent of its early action applicants for the Class of 2012, a decrease of 1.6 percent from last year, Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Jeff Brenzel told the News Friday evening.
The admissions office sent acceptance letters this afternoon to 885 students of the 4,888 who applied, Brenzel said. Yale deferred 65 percent of applicants and rejected 16 percent. Although the acceptance rate decreased, the number of students accepted increased.
Last year, 709 students were selected from 3,594 early applicants for the Class of 2011, for an acceptance rate of 19.7 percent.
The 24.8 percent increase in the number of early acceptances this year is a result of both a larger pool and a larger number of highly qualified applicants, Brenzel said.
“The quantity and quality of the applications this year was extraordinary and unprecedented,” he said.
The number of applications received this year for Yale’s non-binding early action program increased by 36 percent over last year’s total.
Yale is the only remaining school in the Ivy League with an early action program, after Harvard and Princeton universities announced last year that they would cancel their early programs.
Because of this change to the admissions landscape, Brenzel said he expects a decrease in the overall percentage of students who accept an offer of admission — the yield — at all three institutions this year.
“I anticipate that relative to the past…we’ll see more students, as Harvard and Princeton will, who are applying to all three schools,” Brenzel said. “It stands to reason that all three schools will probably experience some decline in yield, because students will be applying to more of the schools.”
Yale’s yield for all accepted students — both early and regular — has hovered around 71 percent for the past three years.
Concerns about Yale’s yield could have prompted the increase in early acceptances, said Jon Reider, college counseling director at San Francisco’s private University High School. Taking a larger number of students early, he said, could help the admissions office manage enrollment numbers in the event that accepted students decide to attend Princeton or Harvard.
At the same time, Reider said, Yale may have chosen to accept a smaller percentage of students early because of criticisms from the college counseling community that elite universities fill their classes with too many students accepted early.
“[Accepting a large percentage of early applicants] leaves the perception that applying early gives you a substantial benefit,” said Reider, who said he does not believe this is the case in general. “This is a response to broader pressures to try and change that perception,” he said, referring to Yale’s decreased percentage of students accepted early.
One factor that could affect Yale’s yield this year is the University’s financial-aid initiative, which University President Richard Levin said will be unveiled in January.
On Monday, Harvard announced a sweeping financial-aid initiative that will reduce the expected financial contributions from middle- and upper-middle-income families and completely eliminate student loans.
Under Harvard’s new policy, families of undergraduates with yearly incomes from $120,000 to $180,000 will be asked to pay 10 percent of their income in tuition. Families making between $60,000 and $120,000 will pay between zero and 10 percent of their yearly incomes.
Brenzel said he expects Yale’s new initiative to be “strong” and “well-received.”
Acceptances to Columbia University’s binding early decision program decreased by 1 percent from last year, to 23 percent. The early decision acceptance rate at Brown University also decreased slightly, by 0.1 percent, to 22.6 percent.
The other three Ivy League schools with early decision programs — the University of Pennsylvania, Cornell University and Dartmouth College — had not yet released early admissions acceptance statistics as of Friday evening.
Of the 4,888 applications, 46 were withdrawn or are incomplete, Brenzel said.
Students who apply to Yale by the Jan. 1 regular decision deadline or whose early applications were deferred will be notified of their admissions outcomes by the beginning of April.


Comments
None 4 years, 4 months ago
"I am proud to say that most people in the class of 2012 seem to be applying to where they fit, not just where they believe sounds most impressive."
Does that apply to you, too?
None 4 years, 4 months ago
i just applied regular decision, even though i know i would have had a better shot at getting accepted in early action (no matter what the admission reps say). it was just frustrating to me because i know yale is my number one choice, but the cost truly was the only reason i didn't apply early. I agree that the middle to lower classes get left out of the early action plan due to the fact that we can't wait around for Yale to decide and possibly miss out on admission/scholarship opportunites elsewhere. I have to say that Harvard has it right(even though I didn't apply there)- no early action and an amazing financial aid package for the middle class. I am hoping that Yale follows suit in the upcoming year. And I am proud to say that most people in the class of 2012 seem to be applying to where they fit, not just where they believe sounds most impressive.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
Maybe the ones who got rejected don't want to go to Princeton or Stanford... not all kids just want a good name, any name.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
Do you think if Yale matched Harvard that Harvard will improve its aid package further? Nice to get them bidding against each other!
None 4 years, 5 months ago
"According to Brian Fitzgerald, director of the Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance at the U.S. Department of Education, early-admissions programs diminish socioeconomic diversity. “The majority of students applying in the early process are full-pays or close to it,” Fitzgerald says. So if early applicants are given a leg up, economic diversity can suffer."
None 4 years, 5 months ago
"Yale is just being left in the dust."
Not really. First of all, even after Penn's announcement and assuming Yale did nothing, Yale would still be spending more per student on financial aid. Penn's announcement is largely a smoke and mirrors thing - they are going to spend $110M on aid versus $120M at Harvard, and Harvard has 40% fewer students. Second of all, Yale is going to make an announcement in January that will most likely match or exceed Harvard's initiative.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
let's not forget that UPenn and Swarthmore have recently changed financial aid policy as well. Yale is just being left in the dust.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
Michael B., the argument that early decision is a "convenient back door for prep schoolers" is based on the assumption that only rich prep school kids know that early action exists (because they are being told by their parents/guidance counselors/tutors), and poor or middle class kids are not intelligent and/or responsible enough to look up Yale's admissions policies on the Internet ahead of time. I personally disagree with this argument, but a lot of people apparently believe in it.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
10:48: If they are so amazing they will probably still get into Princeton or Stanford. Not ideal, but not really that terrible.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
I've heard Yale admissions officers say they could reject the group they accept and accept another group of their applicants that are currently rejected and have a comparable class, recruited athletes excepted. It points out that a) there is an element of chance in the admissions process that should comfort the rejected (a bit) and humble the accepted (more than a bit) and b) it is time for Yale to grow.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
Why don't we just drop the early admissions program like Harvard and Princeton did? The two tier process seems unnecessary, and just makes Yale like it needs an extra edge to keep up with the competition.
If neither Yale nor Harvard nor Princeton offers an early program then they'd all be on the same footing, and I can't believe we'd suffer that much competitively.
Isn't early admissions just a convenient back door for prep schoolers?
None 4 years, 5 months ago
I don't understand the logic that early action (not to be confused with early decision) is a convenient back door for prep schoolers. Could someone please explain to me why that is the case?
None 4 years, 5 months ago
it's not. that comment makes no sense.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
What percentage of deferred might be accepted? Will Yale take more from the early pool to increase its yield, assuming those students are more likely to accept rather than defect to Harvard/Princeton?
None 4 years, 5 months ago
In recent years, up to 250 of the deferred early applicants have been admitted later, I think.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
The problem now is that since Harvard no longer has any early admissions, students who know that Harvard is their first choice will probably apply early to Yale (since they cannot apply early to Harvard and they will want to apply early somewhere to increase their odds of getting in a HYP undergrad). This could hurt Yale's yield significantly. Yale should go back to a true binding early admissions so that applying early means a commitment to Yale and not Harvard, or else it cancels the point of EA.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
It's terrible to think about how many qualified students get turned away each year... For silly, small reasons it seems.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
This probably means that more than half the class will come from the early pool.
Last year the yield was 88% on these early admits, meaning that there were roughly 624 of them included in the 1,322 members of the Class of 2011. Even if the yield rate declines to 75% this year because of increased defections to Harvard and elsewhere, this will still mean 664 matriculants from the early pool, constituting 50.2% of the Class of 2012.
None 4 years, 5 months ago
I'm so excited to be given the opportunity to join the Yale class of 2012!
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