The University offered admission to 3,187 early action applicants 
Friday, or about 27 percent of all early applicants, in its first year 
offering a non-binding early admission option.
Early action 
applications made up about 41 percent of the record-breaking 28,239 
total applications the University received this year, an 18 percent 
increase from last year’s number.
Dean of Admissions Greg Roberts 
said in an email that the University’s early action plan, as well as the
 University’s increased recruitment and outreach efforts, contributed to
 the surge in applications.
Through early action, applicants who 
applied by the Nov. 1 deadline will be informed by Jan. 31 whether they 
were accepted, deferred to the regular application pool or declined 
admission. The students who were accepted to the University were already
 notified last week.
Some 3,150 applicants were deferred to the 
regular application cycle and 4,909 applicants were declined admission. 
The enrollment goal for the Class of 2016 is 3,360, according to a 
University press release.
“The goal [of offering an early action 
option] was to provide the most flexible early admission option possible
 for high school students,” Roberts said.
Unlike the early 
decision option, which the University discontinued in 2006, early action
 is nonbinding. Applicants have until May 1 to commit, which affords 
students the chance to compare financial aid offers from other schools.
Students
 who apply early action undergo the same review process as those 
applying regular decision and have no greater chance of admission, 
Roberts said.
“We simply took the most impressive and deserving 
applicants in the pool,” he said. “We did not have a target or quota 
that drove our decisions.”
Of those offered admission, the average
 SAT score was 2,119 on a 2,400-point scale, up 53 points from the 
average score of those offered admission last year.
Laura Austin, a
 senior at the Liberal Arts and Science Academy in Austin, Texas who 
received an offer of admission Friday, said she is grateful for the 
flexibility the University’s early action plan provides.
“Hearing 
back from U.Va. and knowing that I’ve been accepted is fantastic … [but]
 I can also keep my options open, so I can evaluate all the different 
aspects of the colleges and take the financial packages into 
consideration,” Austin said. In April “I will have more information that
 I can decide from, and I think I’ll make a more informed decision — a 
decision that I’ll be really happy with.”
http://www.cavalierdaily.com/2012/01/23/admissions-sees-record-numbers/
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