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Early Application Numbers Plummet

Harvard numbers down by half after switching to single-school early action program

Yale’s admissions officers did not return phone calls yesterday.

With other elite schools offering more liberal admissions policies, those sticking to Early Decision programs may have a harder time attracting candidates,

Princeton University, which remained with an Early Decision program, showed a more than 20 percent decrease in applications since last year, according to Princeton Dean of Admissions Janet Lavin Rapelye. The decrease may be as high as 25 percent, Rapelye added.

Princeton admissions has not reached any conclusions about why numbers dropped.

Rapelye said the numbers reflect Princeton’s 2001 applicant levels and that the university does not plan on abandoning its Early Decision program.

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The return to restrictive admissions policies puts Harvard and its peer institutions in violation of guidelines adopted by the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) in 2001. Fitzsimmons said that NACAC would be studying the issue further.

‘Sanity Has Returned’

This year’s decline in applications to Harvard is reflective of the potential benefits of the new policy, which Harvard representatives say is intended to both reduce the burden on admissions officers and encourage students to more carefully consider the early application decision.

Last year, Byerly Hall was swamped with applications, prompting officials to reconsider the policy. According to Harvard’s Director of Undergraduate Admissions Marlyn McGrath Lewis ’70-’73, single-choice Early Action has had the “magical effect, beneficial effect of reducing numbers to a level that will allow us to pay careful and single attention to early application applicants.”

She said the “big story is that sanity has returned.”

And according to Fitzsimmons, the lightened load will allow for more care to be given to applications over the whole year.

“In general, we’ll have a lot more time over the course of the year, not just in Early Action but in regular admissions as well,” Fitzsimmons said. “Last year...at 7,600 applications, we felt we were reaching close to the limit.”

Several high school college counselors agreed yesterday that students are benefitting from the new policy.

“I would like to think that students are hearing what the schools have been saying for a while, and that is don’t rush into your college decisions,” said John Anderson, director of college counseling at Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass. “High schools have been worried that this huge increase in early applications was being fueled by jumping on the bandwagon and students are now deliberating more, approaching searches in a more deliberate fashion.”

According to Bruce Breimer, college counselor at Collegiate School in New York, the decrease in Harvard applications is not so much a drop as a reordering. He said that last year’s spike in early applications was a fluke, coming as a result of a “nonsensical” policy.

“Harvard is much better off for having stopped this one year experiment,” Breimer said.

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