Here are three major trends from the early admissions cycle for the Class of 2030—and what students should take away from ...
In Penn's first admission cycle since restoring its standardized testing requirement, the University received more than 7,800 early decision applications — nearly two thousand less than last year.
On Wednesday evening, Brown welcomed 890 of 5,406 early decision applicants to the class of 2030 “as the campus works to heal” from Saturday’s mass shooting, according to a University press release.
The University admitted 1,225 students Friday from a pool of 5,108 applicants, yielding an acceptance rate of 23 percent for ...
You've applied to your dream school, but what are the chances of getting in? The average admission rate for four-year colleges in the U.S. in between 68% and 72%, according to the National Association ...
Notre Dame accepted just 11.8% of restrictive early action applicants, a record low and a decline from 12.9% last year.
Georgetown University’s undergraduate first-year acceptance rate rose to 15% this admissions season, an increase from last year’s record low of 14%. A total of 3,309 applicants were admitted to the ...
The University of Southern California expects an acceptance rate of 10% for the Class of 2029, higher than the admit rate for the previous class. The landscape of college admissions continues to shift ...
Northwestern’s acceptance rate is expected to be 7.5% after receiving more than 50,000 first-year applications during the 2023-24 admissions cycle, according to University spokesperson Jon Yates. The ...
The University’s acceptance rates have hovered around the mid-teens for the graduating classes of 2020 to 2026, dropping into the single digits for the first time for the Class of 2027. (Henry Kofman ...
USC’s acceptance rate for the 2023-24 application season is 9.2%. The University accepted 7,550 potential matriculants out of more than 82,000 applicants, according to decision letters sent to ...
"This is looking to be a brutal year for applicants and admissions outcomes," because schools "have more high-quality ...