Since 1937, the Arlington-based National Association for
College Admission Counseling (NACAC) has worked to create and enforce a
code of ethics for the “admission-counseling” profession.
Although
NACAC member colleges and counselors are very much aware of the practices and
policies to which they agree when joining the organization, sometimes students
and families don’t know there exists a set of rules by which all parties should
conduct the “business”
of college admissions.
As
the college drama winds to a close, it might be useful to remind everyone of
the ground rules or “rights
and responsibilities” basic to offers of admission. Here are some of the
fundamentals directly from the Statement of Principles of Good Practice
(SPGP)
- You have the right to receive
factual and comprehensive information from colleges about their admission,
financial costs, aid opportunities, practices and packaging policies, and
housing policies.
- Once admitted, you
have the right to wait until May 1 to respond to an offer of
admission and/or financial aid (applicants admitted under early decision
programs are an exception).
- Colleges requesting
commitments to offers of admission and/or financial assistance prior to
May 1 must clearly offer the opportunity to request (in writing) an
extension until May 1 and they must grant these extensions without
prejudice.
- You must notify each college
or university to which you have been admitted whether or not you are
accepting or rejecting the offer by no later than May 1 (again the
exception is for early decision).
- You may confirm the intention
to enroll, and, if required, submit a deposit to only one
college or university (the exception to this arises with the
student is placed on a wait list and is later admitted).
- If you are placed on a wait
list, the letter notifying you of that placement should provide a
history that describes the number of students on the
wait list, the number usually offered admission, and the
availability of financial aid and housing for waitlisted students.
- Colleges may not require a
deposit or a written commitment as a condition of remaining on a wait
list.
- You should be allowed a
reasonable amount of time (at least 72 hours) to respond to an offer of
admission from an institution’s waitlist, and the offer should be in the
form of a written and/or electronic communication.
- Colleges are expected to
notify you of the resolution of your wait list status by August
1 at the latest.
- You may accept an offer off the wait list and send a deposit even if you have already deposited elsewhere, but you must notify the college at which you previously indicated your intention to enroll.
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