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       February 27, 2002: President's Page 
 There has been much discussion 
        in the national press  The two principal questions 
        are whether early decision serves the best interests of students and whether 
        it serves the best interests of schools. From the perspective of students, 
        it offers a number of benefits. Those who are admitted early avoid the 
        time and expense of submitting multiple applications, as well as the anxiety 
        of waiting until April to know their college destination. Early decision 
        also benefits students in the regular admission pool, as they do not have 
        to compete for places with students admitted early. As Dean Hargadon told 
        me, The student I worry about is the one who is narrowly turned 
        down by her first choice college in favor of a student with twelve other 
        acceptances who has no intention of attending. One of the concerns raised 
        about early decision is that it encourages students to make college choices 
        before they are ready, and pushes decision-making back into the junior 
        year of high school. Certainly students who are not ready to choose by 
        the fall should wait until the regular admission process. But many students 
        have begun to think about college well before their senior year in high 
        school and are ready to make an informed choice in time to participate 
        in early decision. In fact, our experience is that, perhaps because early 
        decision candidates are required to make a commitment as part of the application 
        process, they frequently have thought more carefully than other students 
        about the choice they are making. It has also been argued that early decision 
        disadvantages the late bloomer, and places greater pressure 
        on students to do well early in their high school careers. It is the case 
        that to be successful in early decision, a student has to have a record 
        of academic achievement, but it is also true that early applicants are 
        often deferred to the regular decision cycle to allow us to obtain more 
        information about their progress in senior year.  Another concern is that some 
        students are applying early not because they have made informed choices, 
        but because they believe they will be disadvantaged if they apply in the 
        regular process, either because many spaces in the entering class will 
        already be filled during early decision or because the standards for early 
        admission are lower than the standards applied later in the process.  At Princeton we carefully monitor 
        both of these concerns. We do want to maintain a fair balance between 
        early admission and regular admission, and we do our best to ensure that 
        those students admitted under early decision are, in fact, the students 
        who would have been admitted under regular decision if that were the only 
        process.  An important concern that we 
        take very seriously is that there are many students, particularly in less 
        affluent communities, who are not aware that early decision is available, 
        or whose schools are not equipped to support early decision applications. 
        This is one important reason to make sure that we do not fill too much 
        of the class during early decision, and to do our best to get information 
        about our program to as many students as possible. We are strongly committed 
        to seeking a diverse student body, and the evidence is that we have admitted 
        some of the most diverse classes in our history since adopting early decision 
        in 1995.  One other concern that has 
        been expressed about early decision is that it eliminates the opportunity 
        for students admitted early to compare financial aid offers and even to 
        use an aid offer from one school to obtain a better offer from another. 
        This is not an issue for Princeton, in part because our financial aid 
        policies are the strongest in the country with respect to need-based aid 
        (including no loan requirement) and in part because we do not engage in 
        bargaining.  Finally, some have expressed 
        concern that early decision accelerates the onset of senioritis, 
        with students slacking off in high school as soon as they are admitted. 
        One problem with this argument is that even for students applying in the 
        regular process, senioritis can arrive with the mailing of the final application, 
        just weeks after early decisions are announced, and the process of filling 
        out multiple applications is not exactly conducive to senior year studies. 
        We try to make it clear to our admitted students that we expect they will 
        continue to perform well throughout their high school careers. From an institutional perspective, 
        early decision offers a number of benefits. Perhaps most importantly, 
        as we try to build a class of excellent students who bring to campus a 
        broad array of talents, backgrounds and interests, it allows us to go 
        into the regular admission process (where we do not know for sure which 
        students offered admission will choose to enroll) knowing the composition 
        of a significant fraction of the class. Moreover, because of its November 
        deadline, early decision allows us to distribute somewhat the enormous 
        workload on the admission staff, allowing them to pay closer attention 
        to each applicant in both the early and the regular process.  The ultimate test of any admission 
        process for Princeton is whether it is fair and equitable to our applicants 
        and whether it allows the University to enroll the strongest possible 
        class, measured against all of the qualities that are important to us, 
        including academic excellence, diversity of talents and interests, potential 
        for leadership, strength of character, and commitment to the service of 
        others. In our experience, a carefully administered early decision program 
        meets this test. At the same time, through the faculty Committee on Undergraduate 
        Admission and Financial Aid we will continually monitor our program to 
        be sure it is, in fact, meeting our aspirations for it.  
 
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