On Pi Day at Tau Time (March 14 at 6:28 p.m.),
MIT granted admission to 1,620 eager applicants. This year’s acceptance
rate of 8.9 percent was a record low, with a record high of 18,109
applications overall. 6,008 of these applications were early action, a
decrease from last year, and 680 of these students were accepted early.
Last year, a total of 1,742 students were admitted. Dean of Admissions
Stuart Schmill ’86 said that one of the factors that may have affected
this year’s high application pool and decrease in early applications was
the fact that Harvard and Princeton reopened their single-choice early
action programs. This meant that students could only apply early to one
school of their choice, resulting in fewer early action applications to
MIT and more regular action applicants.
The class of 2016 is nine percent
African-American, 31 percent Asian-American, 35 percent Caucasian, 14
percent Hispanic, and one percent Native American. Similarly to last
year, 49 percent of admitted students are women. There was a slight
increase in admitted international students, from eight percent last
year to nine percent.
“The applicant pool keeps getting stronger even
as it gets bigger,” Schmill said. For instance, the average SAT scores
of the class of 2016 applicants are higher than in previous years, he
said.
Schmill anticipates a slightly higher yield
than last year due to the fact that students who applied and were
admitted early to Princeton and Harvard did not submit applications to
MIT at all. In previous years, however, those who may really want to go
to Harvard or Princeton also apply to MIT regular action, and might
later decide not to attend MIT.
Last year, MIT’s yield was about 65 percent.
http://tech.mit.edu/V132/N12/admissions.html
http://tech.mit.edu/V132/N12/admissions.html
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