March 31 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. colleges that have been hard to get into are getting even harder.
Duke University offered admission this year to 3,972, or 15 percent of aspirants, down from 18 percent last year, after applications soared, according to Duke officials. Stanford University admitted 2,300 -- or 7.2 percent, the least ever -- said Shawn Abbott, admission director. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology saw its admittance drop below 10 percent for the first time, said Stuart Schmill, admissions dean.
Applications are surging because colleges are marketing themselves more vigorously, and the tougher they are to get into, the more students seek entry to multiple schools and increase competition for slots, said Jon Reider, director of college counseling at San Francisco University High School. The typical senior applies to a dozen colleges, 50 percent more than 10 years ago, Reider said.
âThis is without any question the hardest year ever,â Reider, who is also a former admissions officer for Stanford, near Palo Alto, California, said in an interview. âThis is unprecedented. No question.â
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=adAQlbZSm57k&pos=11
Duke University offered admission this year to 3,972, or 15 percent of aspirants, down from 18 percent last year, after applications soared, according to Duke officials. Stanford University admitted 2,300 -- or 7.2 percent, the least ever -- said Shawn Abbott, admission director. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology saw its admittance drop below 10 percent for the first time, said Stuart Schmill, admissions dean.
Applications are surging because colleges are marketing themselves more vigorously, and the tougher they are to get into, the more students seek entry to multiple schools and increase competition for slots, said Jon Reider, director of college counseling at San Francisco University High School. The typical senior applies to a dozen colleges, 50 percent more than 10 years ago, Reider said.
âThis is without any question the hardest year ever,â Reider, who is also a former admissions officer for Stanford, near Palo Alto, California, said in an interview. âThis is unprecedented. No question.â
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=adAQlbZSm57k&pos=11
