Another year of
increased “no’s” The US birth rate may suggest a decline in the number of
high school graduates, but colleges are still receiving record numbers of
applications. Two years ago, the University of Michigan received 32,000 applications,
and that number jumped to 40,000 last year when U-M joined the easier-to-complete
Common Application. Predictions of a
flat 2011-12 fell flat themselves when U-M announced they received 43,000
applications this year, leaving less wiggle room in the class than ever before.
Since colleges aren’t getting any bigger, more applications
mean more rejection notices, including no’s to students who would have been
sure bet admits two years ago. There’s a
good chance one or two of your students will
get caught in the surprise; be ready to talk about the number of applicants
again this year, confident you can say it was a record-breaking year.
Waitlists are
something more and something less Increased
applications also means more students will
be hearing “maybe” on a day when they had hoped to hear “yes.” More than one
student has told me that being on the waitlist of a college is actually worse
than being denied, since you have no idea if your name is going to be taken off
the list, *and* you still have to make plans as if you weren’t going to be
admitted. It’s a good thing senior prom
doesn’t work this way; imagine how a student would feel on the dance floor when
their partner points to someone across the room and says “There’s my first
choice.”
Waitlists may not be new, but their function took a big turn
a couple of years ago, when more Duke applicants were waitlisted than admitted. Now most colleges use the waitlist as both an
economic necessity and a kind of beauty prize for applicants who would have
been admitted just a couple of years ago.
Students know this, but still hope against hope they’ll be
called off one of the six waitlists they may be on. Make sure to bring them back from their
journey to the World of What If long enough to put a deposit in at a school
they will love, just in case all six
“could be” schools turn in to “could have been” schools.
July-applying
juniors If you think all of next
week’s action will involve only
seniors, think again. Hundreds of
juniors will see the solemn faces
and quiet tears of their role models and decide they know how to make sure this
doesn’t happen to them—they’ll just apply earlier.
Even the most morose senior would tell them this logic is
faulty, if they were asked. But it’s
likely juniors won’t be asking anyone about this “discovery”; they’ll just act
on it on their own, unless you intervene.
Find a minute among the end-of-March madness to summarize the year in
college applications, and e-mail practical advice to juniors and their families
about what this means to the Class of 2013.
Mayan predictions aside, students who apply in July really could be the
end of your counseling world; make sure they understand there can be such a
thing as too early in the college application process, at least for one more
year.
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