Quantcast Daily Skiff
College Media Network

Daily Skiff

  • Front Page

Colleges working overtime on record numbers of applications

David Perlmutt

Issue date: 4/17/08 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
Gilda McGee Parker, an assistant director of admissions for the traditional undergraduate at Queens University, works on college applications in March in Charlotte, N.C. Queens University has received 37 percent more applications than they had last year, an increase reflective of a national trend among colleges.
Media Credit: John D. Simmons, Charlotte Observer via MCT
Gilda McGee Parker, an assistant director of admissions for the traditional undergraduate at Queens University, works on college applications in March in Charlotte, N.C. Queens University has received 37 percent more applications than they had last year, an increase reflective of a national trend among colleges.
[Click to enlarge]

CHARLOTTE, N.C. - George Alyateem is a senior at East Mecklenburg High, a fine student with a 4.5 grade point average in the school's rigorous International Baccalaureate program and a receiver on the football team.

Yet he can't quickly rattle off all the colleges where he's applied for admission.

There are too many - nine.

"The competition is rising," said Alyateem, who wants to be an orthopedic surgeon. "Applying to more colleges gives me a better chance to go to the school I want."

It's seniors like Alyateem who have admissions offices at colleges working overtime sorting through stacks of applications.

At TCU, applications are up 3 percent from last year for a total of 12,016 in 2008, admissions data show.

Applicants to Queens University of Charlotte, N.C., are up 37 percent over last year. The numbers have also jumped at Davidson College (up 10 percent), Johnson C. Smith University (10 percent) and UNC Charlotte (5 percent).

Winthrop University in Rock Hill, N.C., has four to five applicants for each available space in the next freshman class of 1,000 to 1,075 students. A number of trends are fueling the rise.

Nationwide, the current high school senior class is the largest in 20 years. They're applying to college in record numbers and the process has never been more user-friendly - with most colleges accepting applications online. Some schools waive application fees if students file that way. More seniors are casting wider nets, applying to multiple colleges. The "Common Application" works at 315 schools nationally - including TCU. A student can apply to several schools with the punch of a computer button.

"Where once students were sending three applications, they're up to five to eight," said Tina McEntire, UNCC director of undergraduate admissions. "I've talked to my colleagues and everybody's up."

There are pitfalls for applicants.

With a bigger applicant pool, schools can be more selective. TCU's acceptance rate rose from 46 percent last year to 47 percent this year.

At schools like Davidson, with no plans to increase enrollment, wait lists could grow.

So could rejections.

"It puts us in the business of having to say 'no' more often," said Chris Gruber, Davidson's vice president and dean of financial aid.

And application fees aren't cheap - $50 a pop at Davidson and UNCC. George Alyateem spent nearly $500 to file his nine applications.

The applications spike won't necessarily translate into larger freshman classes. Since many students are filing multiple applications, they're applying to schools they have no intention of attending. "These kids want choices and they can choose only one school," said UNCC's McEntire.

Colleges call these students "phantom applicants."

"The 150 very selective colleges are sending out more acceptances because they're having a harder time figuring out who's going to attend," said David Hawkins, director of public policy and research for the National Association for College Admission Counseling. "So in a way, these students who send out 10 to 15 applications are shooting themselves in the foot. They're causing some of the uncertainty in the admission process."

Sandy Rhinehart, East Meck's guidance counseling chair, advises students to apply to three to five schools.

"We tell kids they should have a dream school and the other ones should be sure schools," she said.

News editor Joe Zigtema contributed to this report.


Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll


Have you added your boss/professor on Facebook?


Submit Vote

View Results

TCU Daily Skiff

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

News Now Webcast 3/10/10





Popular Stories

Dayton beats TCU 67-66

Daily Skiff Video





Advertisement



Follow Me!



  Frog Football '09

  Print Archives

  Search the Archives

  - Fall 2005 to Present

  - Fall 1998 to Fall 2003

  Contact Us

  Get E-mail Updates



  About Us

  Staff List

  Jobs

  Advertise

  Classifieds



On the Web

TCU Daily Skiff readers shop Toy Stores online and throughout Fort Worth for birthday gifts and more.

See the freedom debt relief profile

Compare free Texas moving quotes for your college move

Daily Skiff readers who are accounting majors should get familiar with the CPA Exam to prepare for a future in accounting