Georgetown will not be offering any spots to students still on the
school's waitlist after nearly half of all accepted students for the
class of 2015 opted to attend the Hilltop this fall.
The 48.5 percent yield rate represents a significant increase from
those of previous years. The classes of 2014, 2013 and 2012 had yield
rates of 43.4, 42.1 and 45.7 percent respectively, according to Charles
Deacon, dean of undergraduate admissions.
Deacon said that the Office of Undergraduate Admissions took into
account both the students that would defer their studies at Georgetown
for a year as well as the applicants that may choose to attend other
universities after being taken off of their waitlists.
"We have essentially overbooked, but we expect some will defect," he
said, adding that his office expects the Class of 2015 will hit its
target number of 1,580 students.
Georgetown also met many of its admissions goals in terms of diversity.
The incoming freshman class includes at least one student from all 50
states in the U.S. New York has demonstrated the highest yield after
slightly edging out California, the state with the highest number of
applicants.
Those who are not U.S. residents will arrive from 49 nations around the
world this fall. Deacon said that of the almost 2,400 international
students who applied to Georgetown, about 15 percent were admitted.
About half of that group has committed to enrollment.
Additionally, 151 African-American students and a record-high 169
Latino students have committed to Georgetown, giving the university a
40.5 and 45.6 percent yield rate respectively among these groups.
Though each of the four undergraduate schools saw a jump in yield —
48.7 percent at the School of Foreign Service, 52.9 percent at the
School of Nursing and Health Studies and 41.2 percent at the College —
the biggest increase was at the McDonough School of Business, where 340
of the 536 accepted students will be studying next year. This 63.4
percent yield rate represents a statistical increase of 7.3 percent from
last year's data.
Deacon said that the rise in the appeal of the business school, which
jumped to the 10th spot in Bloomberg Businessweek's 2011 ranking of
undergraduate programs, could be attributed to a set of factors.
"The new facility helps," he said, "I also think the financial
improvement [in the economy] recently convinced kids to apply to
McDonough."
Georgetown's overall yield is more than 10 points higher than that of
neighboring school The George Washington University, which experienced a
drop in its rate for this application cycle. According to The Hatchet,
the GWU student newspaper, 33 percent of 7,022 students admitted to the
school's Class of 2015 have signaled their intention to enroll through
an initial deposit.
Harvard University, by comparison, saw a yield rate of 77 percent this
year. Other peer institutions have not announced their yield rates for
the Class of 2015 at this time.
Georgetown's Office of Undergraduate Admissions is happy with the
progress and the popularity seen in the university's high yield rate and
an unprecedented total of 19,275 applications received.
Deacon also said that steps taken by the admissions team and the
Georgetown Admissions Ambassador Program could have contributed to this
spike in appeal.
GAAP, a student-run organization that aims to inform prospective
students about the university, holds several open house weekends for
those accepted to Georgetown so that they may explore life on the
Hilltop.
"We had a good turnout at GAAP open houses and we had really great responses from those people [who attended]," Deacon said.
Deacon also mentioned the positive effects of new efforts the
organization has taken to reach out to Georgetown hopefuls through
social media.
GAAP has established an official Facebook group for the purpose of connecting members of the new freshman class.
The webpage, which has over 1,000 members, is described as "a forum for
you [members of the Class of 2015] to get to know one another and have
your questions answered by current Hoyas."
"That social media impact is hard to measure," Deacon said. "But for
people on the fence, that could have been the thing that pushed them
over."
On the whole, Deacon said he was pleased with the Class of 2015's yield rate.
"We have had a dramatically good year," he said.
http://www.thehoya.com/mobile/waitlist-closed-as-yield-nears-50-1.2237510
No comments:
Post a Comment