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A record-low 5.3 percent of applicants were offered admission to Harvard College’s Class of 2019, when the University announced on Tuesday that it had accepted 1,990 of 37,305 applicants.
A total of 1,013 students were greeted with congratulatory messages when they logged into their admissions portals at 5 p.m. Tuesday, joining the 977 students who were admitted to the class through the College’s restrictive early action program. Including the 4,292 students who were deferred from the early action applicant pool, the regular admission rate was 2.8 percent this year, also down from last year’s rate of 3.1 percent.
Instead of sending admissions notifications via email, as in past years, the Admissions Office asked students to log in to an online portal to learn whether or not they had been admitted. Applicants also received emails indicating when their admissions decisions were available to view online.
Fifty-two percent of admitted students are male, creating a slight gender imbalance in the incoming class that Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons ’67 attributed to the fact that more men than women applied to the College this round. However, Fitzsimmons said, women were accepted at a slightly higher rate than men.
“We certainly were aware of and were trying to attract more women, and I think with some success,” he said. “This year women [got] in at a slightly higher rate. They did so because in the competition they stood out.”
Fifty-five percent of students admitted to the Class of 2018 last year were male.
The pool of admitted students also represents small increases in diversity, with 13.3 percent and 12.1 percent of admitted students identifying as Latino and African American, respectively. Twenty-one percent of admitted students identify as Asian American, up from 19.7 percent last year. Two percent identify as Native American or Native Hawaiian.
The percentage of accepted international students increased slightly to 10.8 percent, up from 10.5 percent of students admitted to the Class of 2018, and 7.7 percent of accepted students are U.S. dual citizens.
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Fitzsimmons said targeted outreach efforts to low-income and minority students may have helped attract a more diverse pool of applicants this year. Sixty-two percent of all admitted students and 80 percent of admitted minority students—including 87 percent of Latinos and 86 percent of African-Americans—appeared on College Board and ACT search lists that Harvard uses to identify potentially qualified applicants from diverse backgrounds, according to Fitzsimmons.
“We’ve been very careful to make sure that this is a good list,” Fitzsimmons said Tuesday. “It’s counterproductive for us to encourage people into the pool who don’t have a chance of getting in.”
A greater proportion of admitted students indicated that they intend to concentrate in the social sciences and humanities while at Harvard than their counterparts last year, at 26 percent and 15 percent this year, respectively. Six percent of admitted students cited Computer Science as their intended concentration.
The Admissions Office staff celebrated the Class of 2019 with pancakes, French toast, and champagne after mailing boxes of acceptance letters on Tuesday.
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Visitas—Harvard’s spring visiting weekend for accepted students—is scheduled for April 25-27, and Harvard anticipates that 1,200 or more students will attend, according to a press release. Admitted students have until May 1 to accept their offers of admission.
The seven other Ivy League schools also released their admissions decisions on Tuesday. Yale’s admissions rate rose to 6.5 percent this year, and Cornell’s rose to 14.9 percent. Columbia accepted 6.1 percent of applicants, while Princeton accepted 7 percent and Brown 8.5 percent, all decreases from last year. The University of Pennsylvania accepted 9.9 percent.
Faculty of Arts and Sciences spokesperson Anna Cowenhoven attended The Crimson’s interview with Fitzsimmons. The interview and early access to admissions statistics were granted on the condition that The Crimson not publish them until late Tuesday night.
—Staff writer Daphne C. Thompson can be reached at daphne.thompson@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @daphnectho.
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