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Early decision

Early decision (ED) or early acceptance is a type of early admission used in college admissions in the United States for admitting freshmen to undergraduate programs. It is used to indicate to the university or college that the candidate considers that institution to be their top choice through a binding commitment to enroll (i.e., if offered admission under an ED program, and the financial aid offered by the school is acceptable, the candidate must enroll at that institution and withdraw all applications to other institutions). Applying early decision brings a greater statistical chance of being accepted.

Candidates applying early decision typically submit their applications mid-October to early November of their senior year of high school and receive a decision around mid-December.[1] In contrast, students applying regular decision typically must submit their applications by January 1 and receive their admissions decision by April 1. Students can know sooner where they will attend, removing uncertainty and the need for multiple applications and the associated costs.

Typically, a candidate who has applied early decision can receive one of three outcomes in December. They may be admitted (bound to attend the school which admitted them), rejected (they will not be able to attend the school), or deferred (they will be reconsidered for admission with the second round of early decision applications or with the regular decision pool and notified later with their final decision). Generally, when an applicant is deferred, they are released from their binding commitment.

Alternatives edit

One alternative to early decision is early action (EA). Some institutions offer both early decision or early action, while others only offer one. Early action is non-binding, so a student admitted to a school early action could choose not to enroll in that school. Furthermore, ED programs require applicants to file only one ED application, while, depending on the institution, EA programs may be restrictive or non-restrictive and allow candidates to apply to more than one institution.[2]

Many colleges now offer a second early decision plan: early decision II (ED II). The application typically due in late December to early January and decision in mid-February.[3] Although the application deadline of early January is the same as for regular decision, the early decision II application is a binding commitment, with the benefits and drawbacks to the applicant and the college being similar to early decision I in most respects. The early decision II timeline is designed to allow students to apply to a new "first choice" school after they find out in mid- to late December they have been unsuccessful in their early decision or early action application to their original first choice, or to allow students that did not apply early decision I to apply under an early decision plan. It is intended as another chance for applicants to show commitment, and another tool for the school to protect its admission yield.[4]

History edit

It was in answer to criticisms of early decision that, starting in 2004, Yale and Stanford switched from early decision to single-choice early action. Harvard, Princeton, and the University of Virginia announced in the Fall of 2006 that they would no longer offer early action or early decision programs, which they claim favor the affluent, and moved to a single deadline instead.[5][6] The University of Florida followed suit the following year. However, the University of Virginia, followed by both Harvard and Princeton, reinstated their single-choice early action program to promote diversity and provide opportunities for students looking for such an option in 2011.[7][8]

Binding commitment edit

Early decision is a binding decision, meaning that students must withdraw applications to other schools if accepted. It is not legally binding,[9][10] but there is a commitment involved with penalties for withdrawing for spurious reasons. Advisers suggest that this method is only for students who are absolutely certain about wanting to attend a specific school.[11] If financial aid is a concern or if a family is "shopping for the best deal", then it is usually advised to apply early action or regular decision instead.[11][12][10] The one stipulated situation under which a student may back out of the agreement is if the financial aid offer is insufficient.[13][14][15]

A student who backs out for other reasons may be "blacklisted" by the early decision college, which may contact the student's high school guidance office,[9] and prevent it from sending transcripts to other colleges, and high schools generally comply with such requests.[14] In addition, the jilted college may contact other colleges about the withdrawal, and the other colleges would likely revoke their offers of acceptance as well.[9]

Critics of the program argue that binding an applicant, especially one that is typically seventeen or eighteen years old, to a single institution is unnecessarily restrictive.[16]

Impact on financial aid edit

When admitted as an early decision applicant, with no other acceptances in hand, a student's bargaining position is weaker because the student cannot compare offers from different colleges.[13][17][9][18][19][20][10] Since the applicant is declaring an intention to attend if accepted, the school can "pinpoint the smallest amount of financial aid it will take for the student to attend."[14] The applicant who is sensitive to financial aid may suffer from the likelihood of the aid amount being less than the expected amount.[21][22][17][15] Several reports confirm that early decision applicants tend to come from wealthier families.[23][24]

A contrasting view is that by applying earlier in the year, the accepted ED students have "first crack at the money,"[12][14][23] particularly at competitive schools without large endowments. In any case, if a highly desirable ED admittee may withdraw because of financial concerns, the college "may pull out all the stops" to prevent this,[20] and that the possibility of backing out for financial reasons gives an applicant some form of negotiating leverage.[12] Universities with very large endowments may be unique in their ability to provide aid equally generously to students regardless of their application plan.[25]

Benefits for colleges edit

Schools which offer early decision benefit from a near certainty that the applicant will attend if admitted.[26] As a result, the admission yield is increased by admitting more students at the ED stage.[4] The timing of the ED process also helps admissions offices spread the work of sifting through applications throughout more of the school year.[27] A number of schools which had EA plans have recently added ED plans to EA (Chicago and Tulane from Class of 2021 on, Virginia from Class of 2024[28]), or have switched to ED and jettisoned EA (Boston College from Class of 2024 on[29]).

Some college counselors speculate that ED can serve to mitigate the problem of students failing to matriculate to a particular school in favor of a "superior" one.[citation needed] For example, one college might only admit a candidate deemed qualified for another, 'superior' college under ED, for in regular decision, should that student be admitted to the 'superior' competitor, that student would be unlikely to attend the college that originally offered the ED admission.[citation needed][clarification needed]

Admit rates and enrollment statistics edit

Applying early decision brings a greater statistical chance of being accepted,[30][12][31][32][33][34][10] possibly doubling or tripling the chances of an acceptance letter.[35] This is usually attributed to three factors: first, candidates who apply "early" can only present colleges with their transcripts until the end of junior year of high school and therefore must be particularly strong applicants with very persuasive transcripts;[citation needed] second, candidates who apply "early" have dedicated themselves to an institution and are more likely to match the institution's admission standards; third, student athletes sometimes apply "early" to their top choice school to demonstrate their commitment to a college varsity coach who, in turn, can push their applications in the admissions process. Some advisors suggest that early decision is the best choice for students who have clearly settled on one particular college.[16]

In 2009, the average early acceptance rate according to one estimate was 15% greater than regular decision applicants.[18] There is less agreement, however, whether it will help a borderline student win acceptance to a competitive college. Early decision candidates tend to have stronger educational credentials than regular decision candidates,[25][34][23] and as a result, these candidates would have been admitted whether they applied by early or regular methods, and therefore the greater statistical likelihood of acceptance may have been explained by membership in the stronger applicant pool.[25] But the commitment of an early decision application demonstrated by a borderline student can still be beneficial; "colleges really want qualified students who want them" and are more likely to offer acceptances to students ready to make a full commitment.[12]

Most institutions include data on the number of ED applicants and ED admits in their annual Common Data Set (a few institutions do not release a Common Data Set at all), and trends for an individual institution can be readily complied. At the most competitive schools, the number of ED applicants has increased at a more rapid pace than regular decision applicants. Although the ED admit rate has declined at these schools in recent years, the absolute number of ED admits has managed to increase while the absolute number of regular decision admits has fallen rapidly and all the admit rates have also fallen.

A few schools have seen ED applicants more than double in the 2012–2019 period, including Rice (2,628 ED apps in 2019–20[36] compared to 1,230 ED apps in 2012–13), Emory, NYU (13,842 ED I and ED II apps in 2019–20;[37] 5,778 in 2012–13), and Boston University (4,700 ED I and ED II apps in 2019–20;[38] 1,069 in 2012–13). The number of ED admits has also doubled at NYU and Boston University over this period, and although the increase of ED admits at other schools has been less dramatic, that increase has nonetheless reduced the number of RD admits meaningfully because half the class or more is now being filled by ED admits. At WUSTL and NYU, about 60% of the class is now taken up at the ED stage.[39][40]

In recent years, there has been a marked trend in the number of ED applicants, and in the proportion of the class being admitted via the ED process.[38] As of 2019–20, almost every highly selective college (where admission rates are below 25%) admits more students through ED than it did a decade ago, but among them, there has been a remarkable shift in the admission strategy of a few schools resulting in as much as 60% of the class being selected from the ED pool compared to 30–35% only a few years ago.[39]

A similar trend exists across the most competitive liberal arts colleges in early decision application and admission numbers, with over 50% of the class being filled at these schools from ED admits compared to only about 44% in 2012–13. Notably, the absolute number of ED admits has increased, even though the number of RD admits, the RD admit rate, the ED admit rate and the overall admit rate have all gone down.

Admission statistics for early decision[a] at US research universities with admit rate averaging <25% in Fall 2019–2022
16 universities:[b] Columbia,[c] Brown, Penn, Dartmouth, Cornell, Duke, Northwestern, Vanderbilt, Johns Hopkins, Rice, WUSTL, Tufts, Carnegie Mellon, Emory, NYU, Boston University (data from Common Data Set or school publications)[citation needed]
Freshman
Year
ED Apps
(a)
ED Admits
(b)
ED Admit
Rate (b/a)
Total
Enrollment (c)
Enrollment
filled by
ED Admits (b/c)
Total Apps
(d)
Total Admits
(e)
Overall Admit
Rate (e/d)
RD Apps[d]
(d-a)
RD Admits
(e-b)
RD Admit
Rate[e]
(e-b)/(d-a)
2012–13 38,840 11,471 29.5% 32,373 35.4% 438,455 90,978 20.7% 399,615 79,507 19.9%
2013–14 41,668 11,965 28.7% 32,246 37.1% 461,805 89,149 19.3% 420,137 77,184 18.4%
2014–15 44,535 12,887 28.9% 33,325 38.7% 489,518 90,153 18.4% 444,983 77,266 17.4%
2015–16 48,104 13,281 27.6% 33,150 40.1% 506,421 89,428 17.7% 458,978 76,363 16.6%
2016–17 51,466 14,003 27.2% 33,546 41.7% 527,239 88,129 16.7% 476,490 74,373 15.6%
2017–18 55,128 14,800 26.8% 33,702 43.9% 545,256 84,015 15.4% 490,857 69,471 14.2%
2018–19 62,598 16,328 26.1% 33,843 48.2% 595,711 77,476 13.0% 533,482 61,287 11.5%
2019–20 71,776 16,787 23.4% 32,899 51.0% 624,089 72,266 11.6% 552,567 55,566 10.1%
2020–21 72,108 17,681 24.5% 33,495 52.8% 608,127 81,025 13.3% 536,019 63,344 11.8%
2021–22 90,193 18,963 21.0% 36,013 52.7% 775,015 74,468 9.6% 684,823 55,505 8.1%
2022–23 94,335 18.841 20.0% 34,215 55.1% 802,988 69,070 8.6% 708,653 50,229 7.1%
Admission statistics for early decision[a] at US liberal arts colleges with admit rate averaging <25% in Fall 2019–2022
23 liberal arts colleges: Pomona, Claremont McKenna, Pitzer, Swarthmore, Bowdoin, Bates, Colby,[f] Amherst, Williams, Barnard, Harvey Mudd, Colorado College, Middlebury, Wesleyan, Hamilton, Colgate, Vassar, Haverford, Carleton, Davidson, Wellesley, Washington & Lee, Grinnell (data from Common Data Set or school publications)[citation needed]
Freshman
Year
ED Apps
(a)
ED Admits
(b)
ED Admit
Rate (b/a)
Total
Enrollment (c)
Enrollment
filled by
ED Admits (b/c)
Total Apps
(d)
Total Admits
(e)
Overall Admit
Rate (e/d)
RD Apps
(d-a)
RD Admits
(e-b)
RD Admit
Rate
(e-b)/(d-a)
2012–13 13,018 4,988 38.3% 11,275 44.2% 137,864 29,517 21.4% 124,846 24,529 19.6%
2013–14 13,908 5,175 37.2% 11,299 45.8% 141,246 28,820 20.4% 127,338 23,645 18.6%
2014–15 14,214 5,117 36.0% 11,387 44.9% 143,625 29,346 20.4% 129,411 24,229 18.7%
2015–16 15,233 5,355 35.2% 11,493 46.6% 153,964 29,853 19.4% 138,731 24,498 17.7%
2016–17 15,100 5,622 37.2% 11,467 49.0% 157,988 29,188 18.5% 142,888 23,566 16.5%
2017–18 16,247 5,850 36.0% 11,540 50.7% 166,967 29,168 17.5% 150,720 23,318 15.5%
2018–19 17,496 5,972 34.1% 11,808 50.6% 184,066 29,585 16.1% 166,570 23,613 14.2%
2019–20 18,146 6,058 33.4% 11,641 52.0% 195,740 28,613 14.6% 177,594 22,555 12.7%
2020–21 17,983 6,217 34.6% 11,006 56.5% 188,271 30,660 16.3% 170,288 24,443 14.4%
2021–22 19,138 6,592 34.4% 12,822 51.4% 226,249 29,888 13.2% 207,111 23,296 11.2%
2022–23 20,398 6,612 32.4% 12,184 54.3% 243,031 28,284 11.6% 222,633 21,672 9.7%

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Numbers include both ED I and ED II when a school offers more than one ED plan.
  2. ^ Schools which changed admission strategies in the 2012–2020 period have not been included: Northeastern, Tulane, Chicago, all of which currently use a combination of EA and ED but did not use ED in the earlier part of this period. Other selective schools with admit rates below 22% have versions of EA plans but currently no ED option: MIT, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Georgetown, Notre Dame. USC has neither ED nor EA admission plans.
  3. ^ Columbia has not released ED admits from 2017–18 but it has released the number of ED applicants each year. An estimate of 700 ED admits is assumed for each year from 2017–18.
  4. ^ Since ED applicants may be deferred, the pool from which RD admits are selected is larger than the RD applicant pool when these deferred applicants are included. Consequently, the RD Admit Rate is slightly below the figures presented in this table.
  5. ^ Since ED applicants may be deferred, the pool from which RD admits are selected is larger than the RD applicant pool when these deferred applicants are included. Consequently, the RD Admit Rate is slightly below the figures presented in this table.
  6. ^ Colby has not yet released the 2017–18 and 2018–2019 common data sets, and the 2016–17 figures are used as estimates for those years.

References edit

  1. ^ Hernandez, Michele A. (2009). A is for Admission: The Insider's Guide to Getting into the Ivy League and Other Top Colleges. Grand Central Publishing. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-446-54067-4.
  2. ^ The Facts About Applying Early: Is It Right For You?
  3. ^ Moon, Kristen. "Early Decision II Colleges: The Complete List. Forbes, Dec 13, 2018". Forbes. Retrieved Aug 29, 2019.
  4. ^ a b Hoover, Eric (26 October 2015). "E.D. II: The Not-So-Early Decision". The New York Times. Retrieved Sep 20, 2019.
  5. ^ NPR: Harvard Ending Early Admissions Process
  6. ^ Princeton: Princeton to end early admissions
  7. ^ "Princeton to reinstate early admission program".
  8. ^ "Early action returns". 24 February 2011.
  9. ^ a b c d "Ask the Experts: Early Decision and Early Application". Peterson's College Search. July 7, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  10. ^ a b c d Erica L. Green, April 10, 2018, Justice Department Launches Probe of College Early Admissions, 'The New York Times, Retrieved April 11, 2018
  11. ^ a b "Early Decision – Financial Aid". The Princeton Review. July 7, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  12. ^ a b c d e Robert J. Massa (December 13, 2010). "The Case for Early Decision". The New York Times. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  13. ^ a b Grace Wong (December 12, 2005). "Early decision action plan: Your child has been accepted to the college of their dreams – but are you sure you can afford it?". CNN/Money. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  14. ^ a b c d Annamaria Andriotis (November 10, 2009). "Do Early Decision Students Get More Aid?". SmartMoney. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  15. ^ a b Lynn O'Shaughnessy (September 8, 2011). "Early Decision: 10 Things You Need To Know About Applying". CBS News. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  16. ^ a b Diana Hanson; Esther Walling; Craig Meister; Kristen Tabun (November 16, 2011). "Which College Admissions Deadline Should You Choose?". US News. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
  17. ^ a b Kim Clark (December 27, 2010). "6 Kinds of Students Shouldn't Apply to College Early: Late bloomers and those who need financial aid benefit from regular applications". US News. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  18. ^ a b Kim Clark (December 15, 2010). "Early Applicants More Likely to Gain College Admission: Higher admission rate of early college applicants fuels controversy". US News. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  19. ^ "The Financial Aid Effect on Early Decision and Early Application". Peterson's College Search. July 7, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  20. ^ a b . CollegeMadeSimple.com. July 7, 2012. Archived from the original on January 4, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  21. ^ Scott Jaschik (February 25, 2011). "Elite universities surrender to early admissions". USA Today. Retrieved December 12, 2011.
  22. ^ Gail MarksJarvis (September 20, 2010). "Applying to college? 'Early decision' could cost more". Chicago Tribune: Business. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  23. ^ a b c Sarah Winkler (July 7, 2012). "How Early Decision Affects Financial Aid". HowStuffWorks.com. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  24. ^ Frank Bruni, December 21, 2016, The New York Times, The Plague of 'Early Decision', Retrieved December 21, 2016, "...It significantly disadvantages students from low-income and middle-income families, who are ..."
  25. ^ a b c Mark Kantrowitz (April 11, 2009). "Guidance Office: Answers About Financial Aid, Part 6". The New York Times. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  26. ^ "Recruitment and Yield Strategies" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2017-04-10. Retrieved Sep 20, 2019.
  27. ^ Nicholas Thompson (September 2000). . Washington Monthly. Archived from the original on January 14, 2013. Retrieved January 11, 2013. ... U.S. News rankings don't measure how much students learn; ...
  28. ^ "UVA Adds Early Decision Option". 29 May 2019. from the original on 2019-09-22. Retrieved Sep 20, 2019.
  29. ^ "Boston College to Launch Early Decision Program". from the original on 2020-08-06. Retrieved Sep 20, 2019.
  30. ^ Diana Hanson; Esther Walling; Craig Meister; Kristen Tabun (November 16, 2011). "Which College Admissions Deadline Should You Choose?". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved December 12, 2011.
  31. ^ Peter Van Buskirk (September 19, 2011). "The College Admissions Insider: Decide if an Early Decision College Application is the Right Choice". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  32. ^ "Financial Aid and Early Decision". College Confidential. July 7, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  33. ^ Christopher Avery; Andrew Fairbanks, Richard Zeckhauser (2004). The Early Admissions Game: Joining the Elite. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-01620-3.
  34. ^ a b Margaret Loftus (September 12, 2011). "Know if Applying to College Early is Right for You: Getting in could be easier, but a search for financial aid might suffer". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  35. ^ Steve Cohen (September 23, 2011). "Top 10 myths of college admissions". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 12, 2011.
  36. ^ "Acceptance rate hits record low 8.7 percent". ricethresher.org. from the original on 2019-03-28. Retrieved Sep 21, 2019.
  37. ^ "Applications to NYU Exceed 84,000". nyu.edu. from the original on 2019-01-07. Retrieved Sep 21, 2019.
  38. ^ a b "Early Decision Applications to BU Surge, Matching National Trend". bu.edu. from the original on 2019-07-06. Retrieved Sep 20, 2019.
  39. ^ a b "Washington University in St. Louis sees 70 percent increase in applications". from the original on 2019-09-21. Retrieved Sep 20, 2019.
  40. ^ "NYU Common Data Set 2018–19" (PDF). nyu.edu. (PDF) from the original on 2019-09-23. Retrieved Sep 21, 2019.

early, decision, early, acceptance, redirects, here, form, academic, publication, peer, review, scholarly, peer, review, result, blind, peer, review, early, acceptance, type, early, admission, used, college, admissions, united, states, admitting, freshmen, und. Early acceptance redirects here For the form of academic publication peer review see Scholarly peer review Result blind peer review Early decision ED or early acceptance is a type of early admission used in college admissions in the United States for admitting freshmen to undergraduate programs It is used to indicate to the university or college that the candidate considers that institution to be their top choice through a binding commitment to enroll i e if offered admission under an ED program and the financial aid offered by the school is acceptable the candidate must enroll at that institution and withdraw all applications to other institutions Applying early decision brings a greater statistical chance of being accepted Candidates applying early decision typically submit their applications mid October to early November of their senior year of high school and receive a decision around mid December 1 In contrast students applying regular decision typically must submit their applications by January 1 and receive their admissions decision by April 1 Students can know sooner where they will attend removing uncertainty and the need for multiple applications and the associated costs Typically a candidate who has applied early decision can receive one of three outcomes in December They may be admitted bound to attend the school which admitted them rejected they will not be able to attend the school or deferred they will be reconsidered for admission with the second round of early decision applications or with the regular decision pool and notified later with their final decision Generally when an applicant is deferred they are released from their binding commitment Contents 1 Alternatives 2 History 3 Binding commitment 4 Impact on financial aid 5 Benefits for colleges 6 Admit rates and enrollment statistics 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesAlternatives editOne alternative to early decision is early action EA Some institutions offer both early decision or early action while others only offer one Early action is non binding so a student admitted to a school early action could choose not to enroll in that school Furthermore ED programs require applicants to file only one ED application while depending on the institution EA programs may be restrictive or non restrictive and allow candidates to apply to more than one institution 2 Many colleges now offer a second early decision plan early decision II ED II The application typically due in late December to early January and decision in mid February 3 Although the application deadline of early January is the same as for regular decision the early decision II application is a binding commitment with the benefits and drawbacks to the applicant and the college being similar to early decision I in most respects The early decision II timeline is designed to allow students to apply to a new first choice school after they find out in mid to late December they have been unsuccessful in their early decision or early action application to their original first choice or to allow students that did not apply early decision I to apply under an early decision plan It is intended as another chance for applicants to show commitment and another tool for the school to protect its admission yield 4 History editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2022 It was in answer to criticisms of early decision that starting in 2004 Yale and Stanford switched from early decision to single choice early action Harvard Princeton and the University of Virginia announced in the Fall of 2006 that they would no longer offer early action or early decision programs which they claim favor the affluent and moved to a single deadline instead 5 6 The University of Florida followed suit the following year However the University of Virginia followed by both Harvard and Princeton reinstated their single choice early action program to promote diversity and provide opportunities for students looking for such an option in 2011 7 8 Binding commitment editEarly decision is a binding decision meaning that students must withdraw applications to other schools if accepted It is not legally binding 9 10 but there is a commitment involved with penalties for withdrawing for spurious reasons Advisers suggest that this method is only for students who are absolutely certain about wanting to attend a specific school 11 If financial aid is a concern or if a family is shopping for the best deal then it is usually advised to apply early action or regular decision instead 11 12 10 The one stipulated situation under which a student may back out of the agreement is if the financial aid offer is insufficient 13 14 15 A student who backs out for other reasons may be blacklisted by the early decision college which may contact the student s high school guidance office 9 and prevent it from sending transcripts to other colleges and high schools generally comply with such requests 14 In addition the jilted college may contact other colleges about the withdrawal and the other colleges would likely revoke their offers of acceptance as well 9 Critics of the program argue that binding an applicant especially one that is typically seventeen or eighteen years old to a single institution is unnecessarily restrictive 16 Impact on financial aid editWhen admitted as an early decision applicant with no other acceptances in hand a student s bargaining position is weaker because the student cannot compare offers from different colleges 13 17 9 18 19 20 10 Since the applicant is declaring an intention to attend if accepted the school can pinpoint the smallest amount of financial aid it will take for the student to attend 14 The applicant who is sensitive to financial aid may suffer from the likelihood of the aid amount being less than the expected amount 21 22 17 15 Several reports confirm that early decision applicants tend to come from wealthier families 23 24 A contrasting view is that by applying earlier in the year the accepted ED students have first crack at the money 12 14 23 particularly at competitive schools without large endowments In any case if a highly desirable ED admittee may withdraw because of financial concerns the college may pull out all the stops to prevent this 20 and that the possibility of backing out for financial reasons gives an applicant some form of negotiating leverage 12 Universities with very large endowments may be unique in their ability to provide aid equally generously to students regardless of their application plan 25 Benefits for colleges editSchools which offer early decision benefit from a near certainty that the applicant will attend if admitted 26 As a result the admission yield is increased by admitting more students at the ED stage 4 The timing of the ED process also helps admissions offices spread the work of sifting through applications throughout more of the school year 27 A number of schools which had EA plans have recently added ED plans to EA Chicago and Tulane from Class of 2021 on Virginia from Class of 2024 28 or have switched to ED and jettisoned EA Boston College from Class of 2024 on 29 Some college counselors speculate that ED can serve to mitigate the problem of students failing to matriculate to a particular school in favor of a superior one citation needed For example one college might only admit a candidate deemed qualified for another superior college under ED for in regular decision should that student be admitted to the superior competitor that student would be unlikely to attend the college that originally offered the ED admission citation needed clarification needed Admit rates and enrollment statistics editApplying early decision brings a greater statistical chance of being accepted 30 12 31 32 33 34 10 possibly doubling or tripling the chances of an acceptance letter 35 This is usually attributed to three factors first candidates who apply early can only present colleges with their transcripts until the end of junior year of high school and therefore must be particularly strong applicants with very persuasive transcripts citation needed second candidates who apply early have dedicated themselves to an institution and are more likely to match the institution s admission standards third student athletes sometimes apply early to their top choice school to demonstrate their commitment to a college varsity coach who in turn can push their applications in the admissions process Some advisors suggest that early decision is the best choice for students who have clearly settled on one particular college 16 In 2009 the average early acceptance rate according to one estimate was 15 greater than regular decision applicants 18 There is less agreement however whether it will help a borderline student win acceptance to a competitive college Early decision candidates tend to have stronger educational credentials than regular decision candidates 25 34 23 and as a result these candidates would have been admitted whether they applied by early or regular methods and therefore the greater statistical likelihood of acceptance may have been explained by membership in the stronger applicant pool 25 But the commitment of an early decision application demonstrated by a borderline student can still be beneficial colleges really want qualified students who want them and are more likely to offer acceptances to students ready to make a full commitment 12 Most institutions include data on the number of ED applicants and ED admits in their annual Common Data Set a few institutions do not release a Common Data Set at all and trends for an individual institution can be readily complied At the most competitive schools the number of ED applicants has increased at a more rapid pace than regular decision applicants Although the ED admit rate has declined at these schools in recent years the absolute number of ED admits has managed to increase while the absolute number of regular decision admits has fallen rapidly and all the admit rates have also fallen A few schools have seen ED applicants more than double in the 2012 2019 period including Rice 2 628 ED apps in 2019 20 36 compared to 1 230 ED apps in 2012 13 Emory NYU 13 842 ED I and ED II apps in 2019 20 37 5 778 in 2012 13 and Boston University 4 700 ED I and ED II apps in 2019 20 38 1 069 in 2012 13 The number of ED admits has also doubled at NYU and Boston University over this period and although the increase of ED admits at other schools has been less dramatic that increase has nonetheless reduced the number of RD admits meaningfully because half the class or more is now being filled by ED admits At WUSTL and NYU about 60 of the class is now taken up at the ED stage 39 40 In recent years there has been a marked trend in the number of ED applicants and in the proportion of the class being admitted via the ED process 38 As of 2019 20 almost every highly selective college where admission rates are below 25 admits more students through ED than it did a decade ago but among them there has been a remarkable shift in the admission strategy of a few schools resulting in as much as 60 of the class being selected from the ED pool compared to 30 35 only a few years ago 39 A similar trend exists across the most competitive liberal arts colleges in early decision application and admission numbers with over 50 of the class being filled at these schools from ED admits compared to only about 44 in 2012 13 Notably the absolute number of ED admits has increased even though the number of RD admits the RD admit rate the ED admit rate and the overall admit rate have all gone down Admission statistics for early decision a at US research universities with admit rate averaging lt 25 in Fall 2019 2022 16 universities b Columbia c Brown Penn Dartmouth Cornell Duke Northwestern Vanderbilt Johns Hopkins Rice WUSTL Tufts Carnegie Mellon Emory NYU Boston University data from Common Data Set or school publications citation needed Freshman Year ED Apps a ED Admits b ED Admit Rate b a Total Enrollment c Enrollment filled by ED Admits b c Total Apps d Total Admits e Overall Admit Rate e d RD Apps d d a RD Admits e b RD Admit Rate e e b d a 2012 13 38 840 11 471 29 5 32 373 35 4 438 455 90 978 20 7 399 615 79 507 19 9 2013 14 41 668 11 965 28 7 32 246 37 1 461 805 89 149 19 3 420 137 77 184 18 4 2014 15 44 535 12 887 28 9 33 325 38 7 489 518 90 153 18 4 444 983 77 266 17 4 2015 16 48 104 13 281 27 6 33 150 40 1 506 421 89 428 17 7 458 978 76 363 16 6 2016 17 51 466 14 003 27 2 33 546 41 7 527 239 88 129 16 7 476 490 74 373 15 6 2017 18 55 128 14 800 26 8 33 702 43 9 545 256 84 015 15 4 490 857 69 471 14 2 2018 19 62 598 16 328 26 1 33 843 48 2 595 711 77 476 13 0 533 482 61 287 11 5 2019 20 71 776 16 787 23 4 32 899 51 0 624 089 72 266 11 6 552 567 55 566 10 1 2020 21 72 108 17 681 24 5 33 495 52 8 608 127 81 025 13 3 536 019 63 344 11 8 2021 22 90 193 18 963 21 0 36 013 52 7 775 015 74 468 9 6 684 823 55 505 8 1 2022 23 94 335 18 841 20 0 34 215 55 1 802 988 69 070 8 6 708 653 50 229 7 1 Admission statistics for early decision a at US liberal arts colleges with admit rate averaging lt 25 in Fall 2019 2022 23 liberal arts colleges Pomona Claremont McKenna Pitzer Swarthmore Bowdoin Bates Colby f Amherst Williams Barnard Harvey Mudd Colorado College Middlebury Wesleyan Hamilton Colgate Vassar Haverford Carleton Davidson Wellesley Washington amp Lee Grinnell data from Common Data Set or school publications citation needed Freshman Year ED Apps a ED Admits b ED Admit Rate b a Total Enrollment c Enrollment filled by ED Admits b c Total Apps d Total Admits e Overall Admit Rate e d RD Apps d a RD Admits e b RD Admit Rate e b d a 2012 13 13 018 4 988 38 3 11 275 44 2 137 864 29 517 21 4 124 846 24 529 19 6 2013 14 13 908 5 175 37 2 11 299 45 8 141 246 28 820 20 4 127 338 23 645 18 6 2014 15 14 214 5 117 36 0 11 387 44 9 143 625 29 346 20 4 129 411 24 229 18 7 2015 16 15 233 5 355 35 2 11 493 46 6 153 964 29 853 19 4 138 731 24 498 17 7 2016 17 15 100 5 622 37 2 11 467 49 0 157 988 29 188 18 5 142 888 23 566 16 5 2017 18 16 247 5 850 36 0 11 540 50 7 166 967 29 168 17 5 150 720 23 318 15 5 2018 19 17 496 5 972 34 1 11 808 50 6 184 066 29 585 16 1 166 570 23 613 14 2 2019 20 18 146 6 058 33 4 11 641 52 0 195 740 28 613 14 6 177 594 22 555 12 7 2020 21 17 983 6 217 34 6 11 006 56 5 188 271 30 660 16 3 170 288 24 443 14 4 2021 22 19 138 6 592 34 4 12 822 51 4 226 249 29 888 13 2 207 111 23 296 11 2 2022 23 20 398 6 612 32 4 12 184 54 3 243 031 28 284 11 6 222 633 21 672 9 7 See also editUniversity and college admission Early action Rolling admission The Early Admissions GameNotes edit a b Numbers include both ED I and ED II when a school offers more than one ED plan Schools which changed admission strategies in the 2012 2020 period have not been included Northeastern Tulane Chicago all of which currently use a combination of EA and ED but did not use ED in the earlier part of this period Other selective schools with admit rates below 22 have versions of EA plans but currently no ED option MIT Stanford Harvard Yale Princeton Georgetown Notre Dame USC has neither ED nor EA admission plans Columbia has not released ED admits from 2017 18 but it has released the number of ED applicants each year An estimate of 700 ED admits is assumed for each year from 2017 18 Since ED applicants may be deferred the pool from which RD admits are selected is larger than the RD applicant pool when these deferred applicants are included Consequently the RD Admit Rate is slightly below the figures presented in this table Since ED applicants may be deferred the pool from which RD admits are selected is larger than the RD applicant pool when these deferred applicants are included Consequently the RD Admit Rate is slightly below the figures presented in this table Colby has not yet released the 2017 18 and 2018 2019 common data sets and the 2016 17 figures are used as estimates for those years References edit Hernandez Michele A 2009 A is for Admission The Insider s Guide to Getting into the Ivy League and Other Top Colleges Grand Central Publishing p 33 ISBN 978 0 446 54067 4 The Facts About Applying Early Is It Right For You Moon Kristen Early Decision II Colleges The Complete List Forbes Dec 13 2018 Forbes Retrieved Aug 29 2019 a b Hoover Eric 26 October 2015 E D II The Not So Early Decision The New York Times Retrieved Sep 20 2019 NPR Harvard Ending Early Admissions Process Princeton Princeton to end early admissions Princeton to reinstate early admission program Early action returns 24 February 2011 a b c d Ask the Experts Early Decision and Early Application Peterson s College Search July 7 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 a b c d Erica L Green April 10 2018 Justice Department Launches Probe of College Early Admissions The New York Times Retrieved April 11 2018 a b Early Decision Financial Aid The Princeton Review July 7 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 a b c d e Robert J Massa December 13 2010 The Case for Early Decision The New York Times Retrieved July 7 2012 a b Grace Wong December 12 2005 Early decision action plan Your child has been accepted to the college of their dreams but are you sure you can afford it CNN Money Retrieved July 7 2012 a b c d Annamaria Andriotis November 10 2009 Do Early Decision Students Get More Aid SmartMoney Retrieved July 7 2012 a b Lynn O Shaughnessy September 8 2011 Early Decision 10 Things You Need To Know About Applying CBS News Retrieved July 7 2012 a b Diana Hanson Esther Walling Craig Meister Kristen Tabun November 16 2011 Which College Admissions Deadline Should You Choose US News Retrieved 2011 12 12 a b Kim Clark December 27 2010 6 Kinds of Students Shouldn t Apply to College Early Late bloomers and those who need financial aid benefit from regular applications US News Retrieved July 7 2012 a b Kim Clark December 15 2010 Early Applicants More Likely to Gain College Admission Higher admission rate of early college applicants fuels controversy US News Retrieved July 7 2012 The Financial Aid Effect on Early Decision and Early Application Peterson s College Search July 7 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 a b How Early Decision Can Affect Financial Aid CollegeMadeSimple com July 7 2012 Archived from the original on January 4 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 Scott Jaschik February 25 2011 Elite universities surrender to early admissions USA Today Retrieved December 12 2011 Gail MarksJarvis September 20 2010 Applying to college Early decision could cost more Chicago Tribune Business Retrieved July 7 2012 a b c Sarah Winkler July 7 2012 How Early Decision Affects Financial Aid HowStuffWorks com Retrieved July 7 2012 Frank Bruni December 21 2016 The New York Times The Plague of Early Decision Retrieved December 21 2016 It significantly disadvantages students from low income and middle income families who are a b c Mark Kantrowitz April 11 2009 Guidance Office Answers About Financial Aid Part 6 The New York Times Retrieved July 7 2012 Recruitment and Yield Strategies PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2017 04 10 Retrieved Sep 20 2019 Nicholas Thompson September 2000 Playing With Numbers How U S News mismeasures higher education and what we can do about it Washington Monthly Archived from the original on January 14 2013 Retrieved January 11 2013 U S News rankings don t measure how much students learn UVA Adds Early Decision Option 29 May 2019 Archived from the original on 2019 09 22 Retrieved Sep 20 2019 Boston College to Launch Early Decision Program Archived from the original on 2020 08 06 Retrieved Sep 20 2019 Diana Hanson Esther Walling Craig Meister Kristen Tabun November 16 2011 Which College Admissions Deadline Should You Choose U S News amp World Report Retrieved December 12 2011 Peter Van Buskirk September 19 2011 The College Admissions Insider Decide if an Early Decision College Application is the Right Choice U S News amp World Report Retrieved July 7 2012 Financial Aid and Early Decision College Confidential July 7 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 Christopher Avery Andrew Fairbanks Richard Zeckhauser 2004 The Early Admissions Game Joining the Elite Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01620 3 a b Margaret Loftus September 12 2011 Know if Applying to College Early is Right for You Getting in could be easier but a search for financial aid might suffer U S News amp World Report Retrieved July 7 2012 Steve Cohen September 23 2011 Top 10 myths of college admissions The Washington Post Retrieved December 12 2011 Acceptance rate hits record low 8 7 percent ricethresher org Archived from the original on 2019 03 28 Retrieved Sep 21 2019 Applications to NYU Exceed 84 000 nyu edu Archived from the original on 2019 01 07 Retrieved Sep 21 2019 a b Early Decision Applications to BU Surge Matching National Trend bu edu Archived from the original on 2019 07 06 Retrieved Sep 20 2019 a b Washington University in St Louis sees 70 percent increase in applications Archived from the original on 2019 09 21 Retrieved Sep 20 2019 NYU Common Data Set 2018 19 PDF nyu edu Archived PDF from the original on 2019 09 23 Retrieved Sep 21 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Early decision amp oldid 1209146512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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