For
Harvard and Princeton, early admissions will remain in effect
for fall 2006, but will no longer be an option for the class
entering in 2008. Students will not be able to apply for early
admissions beginning in the fall of 2007 and all applications
thereafter will be due by January 1st. Harvard and Princeton
are the first Ivy League schools to cut early admissions programs,
directly affecting potential students and other universities
that give high school seniors the ability to apply in the
fall and receive a decision from admissions by mid-December.
All students that apply to Harvard and Princeton will now
be evaluated from the same pool of applicants and notified
of their acceptance in the spring. The University of Virginia
has also recently abolished early admissions practices. All
three schools believe this will benefit low income students
who rarely apply for early admissions.
Schools
have argued that early admissions programs discriminate against
disadvantaged students and gives extra advantage to the already
advantaged. Poorer families will not risk committing to one
school until they see what kind of financial aid they are
eligible for. Guidance counselors for these students are usually
inadequate and have more students to counsel than the more
affluent high schools. Studies of the top 14 elite colleges
have shown that the majority of students that apply for early
admissions do not need financial aid. Harvard has also taken
additional steps to make itself more accessible to poor and
working-class students, such as not requiring families with
an income below $60,000 a year to pay for their child’s
education.
Yale,
MIT, Stanford, and the University of Pennsylvania currently
have no intentions of stopping their early admissions practices.
Likewise, state universities are unlikely to stop early admissions
because they depend on knowing how many students will attend
in the fall to calculate class size for the upcoming year.
Tufts University is still deciding whether it will follow
in Harvard and Princeton’s footsteps. Tufts cut back
on its early admissions program two years ago, from accepting
forty percent of applications to a third. Tufts also admits
to accepting too many students during early admissions, when
more compelling students have applied during regular admissions
in the spring.
According
to Vicki Wood, PowerScore SAT Admissions Counselor and Course
Developer, “Anything that levels the playing field is
an improvement. The elimination of early admissions programs
will benefit applicants who were previously unaware of the
program, such as students from low-income schools or from
schools with inadequate guidance programs. Their applications
will be judged in the same time frame as the applications
of students from more affluent districts and schools, rather
than after one-third of the admissions openings are filled
by early applicants. If early admissions truly does not give
applicants an advantage, then they should still be accepted
during regular admissions. On the downside, students who planned
to use early admissions to prove their allegiance to a particular
college or university will have to find new ways to show their
sincerity and passion.” For students applying to these
schools as graduate students, “It’s tough to predict
what effect, if any, this might have on admissions policies
for graduate level programs,” states Steve Stein, PowerScore
LSAT and GMAT Instructor, Admissions Counselor and Course
Developer.
The consensus
among the top universities is that eliminating early admissions
programs will benefit low income students, but add anxiety
for students that have to wait to apply and receive a response
from their school of choice. In the Harvard University Gazette,
the Harvard interim President, Derek Bok states, “We
hope that doing away with early admission will improve the
process and make it simpler and fairer.”
PowerScore
Instructors and Admissions Counselors are available to assist
students applying for entry into the College or Graduate School
of their choice. PowerScore has gathered a team of admissions
experts—including former college admissions board members,
college instructors, and students from top ten colleges and
graduate schools—to address students’ admissions
counseling and admissions essay needs. Our admissions experts
can help students address weaknesses in their application
such as a low GPA or SAT, GRE, GMAT, or LSAT score, inconsistent
grade performance, and disciplinary violations. Our counselors
will develop a plan tailored to students needs in order to
provide them with the best possible application.
PowerScore
is one of the world’s fastest growing test preparation
companies and offers GMAT, GRE, LSAT, and SAT preparation
classes in over 75 locations in the U.S. and abroad. For more
information, please visit www.powerscore.com.
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