November 8, 2006: President's Page
THE ALUMNI WEEKLY PROVIDES THESE PAGES TO THE PRESIDENT
Early Admission
Earlier this fall, Princeton decided to eliminate early decision and
instead operate a single admission process for all students, beginning
with the class that will enter in the fall of 2008. Although we had been
considering this step for several years, we did not believe it was something
we could do unilaterally. When Harvard announced it was eliminating early
admission, we decided the time had come when we should act, and following
thorough discussion, the trustees agreed.
Our first and most compelling reason to adopt a single admission process
is a matter of simple fairness. Under this process, all admission decisions
will be made on the same terms and at the same time. In recent years,
while half of our class was admitted in a competition with about 2,200
other applicants, the other half was competing against some 15,000 other
applicants. While there are strategic advantages to being able to enroll
a significant portion of the class early, we increasingly came to recognize
that it was very difficult to be fair to all applicants—and to be
perceived as fair to applicants who do not apply early—when almost
27 percent of the students who apply early are admitted, as compared to
less than 8 percent of those who apply later. Princeton has attracted
very strong candidates in the early process, but the discrepancy between
the two rates is particularly worrisome in light of the demographic differences
between the two applicant pools, with the early pool significantly more
affluent, less international, and less diverse.
Our concern about fairness was amplified by the recent increase in “strategizing”
associated with early admission. Many schools that serve more affluent
and admission-savvy populations have told us that early admission has
evolved from a program designed for a relative handful of students who
make a clear college choice by the fall of their senior year to a program
in which students and schools elect early admission because they perceive
it to provide a competitive advantage. As a result, the frenzy over college
admission has moved to the junior year, students are being asked to make
decisions before they are prepared to make them, and many students are
coasting through their senior years after being admitted to college in
December.
At the same time, students and schools in less affluent neighborhoods
clearly find themselves at a competitive disadvantage as colleges admit
a third to a half of their classes before these students even apply. Many
of these students are not as well advised by their guidance counselors
about the benefits of early admission, or don’t learn in time that
an early program exists. Even when they know about early admission, many
of these students are concerned about committing to any school without
being able to consider a range of potential financial aid packages.
Since we have the strongest financial aid program in the country, it
is to our advantage to encourage students to compare packages. We believe
there are enormous educational benefits to enrolling students from a full
range of socioeconomic backgrounds. Over the past 10 years, the percentage
of our entering class on financial aid has increased from 38 percent to
55 percent, and this year 11 percent of our freshmen are the first in
their families to attend college. We believe we can fully achieve our
goals only by considering all applicants in a single pool. A single process
will also allow our admission staff to travel more in the fall to inform
students from all backgrounds about our commitments to undergraduate education
and financial aid.
Some alumni have expressed concern that the elimination of early admission
will reduce the quality of Princeton classes. We believe that it will
have the opposite effect by allowing us to base our decisions on more
complete information about our applicants and about the entire applicant
pool. A single admission process does entail some greater uncertainty
as to precisely which students will enroll, since none of our applicants
will be required to attend Princeton if admitted, but we have every confidence
that, with the help of schools committee volunteers and others, the students
we admit will recognize that there is no better place in the world to
be an undergraduate. There may be students who chose to apply to a school
with an early program when they otherwise might have applied to Princeton,
but our applicant pool is so strong that we still will have many more
exceptional applicants than we can accommodate.
Some alumni have asked whether a single admission process will in any
way alter our policies regarding the admission of alumni children. The
answer is no, and we have every reason to believe that alumni children
will continue to be well represented in our classes.
Some have expressed concern about the impact of a single admission process
on athletic recruiting. This is a concern we take seriously, and Dean
of Admission Janet Rapelye and our coaches have already given a great
deal of thought to how we can be sure to continue to compete successfully
for the student athletes we want to attract to Princeton. One element
of our strategy will be continued use of the letters that by Ivy League
agreement admission offices are allowed to provide to recruited athletes
in the fall to indicate that as long as they continue to do well in school
they are “likely” to be admitted.
Finally, some have expressed concern that a single admission process
reduces the likelihood that we will enroll students for whom Princeton
is their “first choice.” Students certainly will have every
opportunity to communicate this in their applications and their schools
committee interviews. But we have to remember that there are many excellent
students who simply have no way to identify a “first choice”
by the fall of their senior year in high school. One of our challenges
is to communicate more effectively with students who know very little
about Princeton, who don’t know others who have attended Princeton,
who don’t have the resources to visit the campus, and yet who would
benefit enormously from what Princeton has to offer and would contribute
greatly to the intellectual, cultural, and residential vitality of campus
life.
In a posting on one of the Tigernet discussion groups, one alumna noted
that the right test is not whether a student loves Princeton before arriving,
but whether the student loves Princeton after living and learning here.
As far as we can tell, alumni admitted in regular admission graduate with
just as much attachment to Princeton as those who had the advantage of
being admitted early.
I hope other universities will join Princeton, Harvard, and more recently
the University of Virginia in eliminating early admission. But whether
they do or not, I have every confidence that we will continue to attract
the very best students in the world and that we have done the right thing
for Princeton by adopting an admission process that is fair and equitable
to all of our applicants.