Every year, the Arlington-based National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) surveys its members to get a picture of what’s
happening in the world of college admissions. Their results are compiled in NACAC’s
State of College Admission, which
essentially examines the “transition from high school to postsecondary
education” and features data collected from school counselors as well as
admissions staff at colleges and universities across the country.
This year, 2345 school counseling
offices responded to the Counseling Trends Survey (CTS), of which 85% were
public, 6% private non-parochial and 10% private parochial. The Admissions
Trends Survey (ATS) was subdivided into two parts—one went to admission offices
and the other went to institutional research (IR) offices. NACAC received 447 institutional
responses for an overall response rate of 35% out of 1263 colleges contacted.
While the report provides a good overall snapshot of the state of the college admission industry, a few specific headlines are worth noting:
- College applications increased by 6 percent. The Higher Education Research
Institute reports that 36% of first-time freshmen applied to seven or more colleges. And
according to the Admission Trends Survey, the average number of
applications for each admission office staff member for Fall 2017 was 1035
for public institutions and 461 for private institutions. It’s no are
increasingly turning to enrollment management software for support.
- Colleges and universities
accept two-thirds of applicants. Despite how it feels to the average
high school student, the average selectivity rate among colleges surveyed was 66.7% for Fall 2017.
This rate has actually increased
from a low of 63.9% in Fall 2012.
- Average
yield rate holds steady after long decline. Over the past ten years, average yield (percent of
students accepting an offer of admission) has steadily declined from 48%
in Fall 2007 to 33.7% in Fall 2017. While yield rates mean little to most
prospective students, accurately predicting yield is critical to
admissions professionals hoping to avoid either over- or under-enrollment.
Having this metric stay steady is a big deal for those charged with
crunching the numbers.
- Email
tops the list of recruitment strategies. Colleges have a wide range of tools available for
connecting with prospective applicants. Not surprisingly, contacting them
through email and engaging with them through the institution’s website or
by hosting campus visits were the most “important.”
- Early
decision increased in 2018. Twenty-five
percent of respondents to the Admission Trends Survey offer Early Decision
(ED). Between Fall 2017 and Fall 2018, colleges reported an average
increase of 11% in the number of ED applicants and 10% in ED admits.
- Early
action also increased.
Thirty-eight percent of colleges responding to the ATS offered early
action options. For Fall 2018, 45% of applications to colleges with early
action plans were received through EA. But average yield rate for EA
admits was nearly identical to that of the overall pool (25% and 24%
respectively). From Fall 2017 to Fall 2018, the number of EA applications
increased by 10%, while the number of students accepted through EA
increased by 9%.
- Likelihood
of wait list acceptance remains low. While
wait list activity generally increased, the odds of getting admitted from
the wait list were still pretty low. For the Fall 2018 admission cycle,
43% of colleges reported using a wait list and placing an average of 10%
of all applicants on the wait list. An average 50% of waitlisted students
opted to stay on the wait list, while colleges admitted only about 20% of
these hopefuls.
- Admissions
offices identify grades and curriculum as top factors in admissions. For decades, academic performance in high school has
been the most important consideration in freshman admission. In fact the
relative importance of many admissions decision factors have remained
“remarkably” stable over time. Notable exceptions would include the
declining importance of class rank and interviews.
- Student-to-counselor
ratios remain outrageous. According
to the U.S. Department of Education, in 2016-17 each public school
counselor was responsible for overseeing a caseload of 455 students, on
average. This number greatly exceeds the 250:1 ratio recommended by the
American School Counselor Association. Only New Hampshire and Vermont had
ratios below the ASCA’s recommended standard (220 and 202 respectively).
The states with the highest number of students per school counselor
included Arizona (905), Michigan (741), Illinois (686), California (663)
and Minnesota (659).
- Private schools devote more time to college counseling. College admissions counseling is only one of myriad responsibilities shouldered by school counselors. Counseling staff at private schools spend an average of 31% of their time on college counseling, while their colleagues in public schools spend only 19% of their time on that task.
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