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A strategic effort to raise the bar for admission to the University is yielding greater numbers of applicants to the freshman class and increasingly selective admissions. This year, for example, BU saw a record 57,433 students apply to the Class of 2020, as well as a 108 percent increase over last year in students applying for early decision.
“The numbers reflect the happy confluence of our growing reputation for excellence with prospective students’ dreams and aspirations,” says President Robert A. Brown. “I’m grateful for all the great members of our community who work so hard to deliver quality, quality that translates into very encouraging results in our recruiting and retention. The interest so many promising students have in attending Boston University is heartening.”
University Provost Jean Morrison says the plan to boost selectivity was put in place in 2010, when the administration decided to “systematically decrease the size of the incoming fall freshman class” by 100 students per year. The targeted size of the incoming class arriving in fall 2016, for example, is 3,500 students. Also, says Morrison, for the most recent admissions season—fall 2016—the University added a second round of early decision, a move that doubled the number of students applying for early consideration. “This allows us a second chance to select students who are guaranteed to come to BU if they are accepted,” Morrison says. “Early decision is the best way for students who know they want to come to BU to get in.”
The University’s growing stature and quality are attracting a more talented pool of applicants, she says. “As a result, and in conjunction with the changes we’ve made to our admissions processes, admission to our incoming fall freshman class is increasingly more selective,” she says. “We have made strategic decisions that have affected the process and the growing reputation of the University…so BU is an increasingly competitive place. We have moved away from being a safety school—we are now the first choice for a larger and higher-quality group of students.
“We are extremely pleased to see this continued increase, both in the volume and academic caliber of students applying to Boston University,” the provost says. “These figures are very much a reflection of BU’s enhanced recognition for excellence, from our sustained rise in national and international rankings to the seminal scholarship and foundational research discoveries that earn daily attention for our faculty and students.”
Kelly Walter, associate vice president and executive director of admissions, says she is impressed not only by the size of the pool, but also by the applicants’ academic and overall achievements—their average SAT score is 1913, and they have an average GPA of A-. “We will be making some very difficult choices over the next few months,” Walter says. “It’s a good problem to have, but very challenging given the caliber of the pool.”
This year’s applicants come from all 50 states, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa. The top five states students applied from are California, New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Connecticut. And the pool is more ethnically and racially diverse—17 percent of applicants are underrepresented minority students.
About 22 percent of the applicants are international, hailing from 153 countries. The top five foreign countries BU received applications from are China, India, South Korea, Canada, and Taiwan. Applications also came in this year from countries that weren’t on last year’s list, including Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq, Angola, Eritrea, Namibia, Antigua, and Lesotho. “BU is definitely a global university, and we can see that in the applicant pool,” Walter says.
AG Dumas,
“…BU is one of the very few first-class institutions that has always offered academic opportunity to a broader spectrum of college-bound students…..that’s what has always made BU a dynamic, diverse and egalitarian — versus a strictly elitist– intellectual haven.”
Well said! Too bad, many erroneously judge a school by how elitist it is — i.e., how low its acceptance rate is. It’s a shame that the US News & World Report rankings perpetuate this mentality.
Double edged sword. As an alum, some pride is warranted of course. As a parent of a child who was accepted to many highly regarded engineering programs in the northeast, but waitlisted at BU ENG, a bit frustrating. Lost is the individual attention to applicants with such a daunting number of applications. My child had amazing extra curricular activities making him exceptionally atrractive to other top engineering programs, most even providing merit scholarships, yet a child of a successful alum is waitlisted by BU ? No harm, my child is going to a higher ranked engineering school. BU ‘s loss.
Well, this is great news if all you care about is prestige and rankings.
“And the pool is more ethnically and racially diverse—17 percent of applicants are underrepresented minority students.” How many of this diverse pool were accepted ?
In the BU Commencement in 1981, I was one of those underrepresented minority students. In 1977, I was a good HS student, not an outstanding one. I couldn’t afford SAT tutors or college application consultants, but BU accepted me. I attended the School of Nursing for 2 years then transferred to Sargent College. I graduated on time. Although the minority representation in both schools was very low, the commitment to an economically and racially diverse overall student body was very evident on campus (Thank-you Dr. Silber).
I applaud the previous poster and his call exercise caution while pursuing this elitist path. You’ll be able to identify the recent BU grad in the crowd with certain, but for all the wrong reasons.
While it’s wonderful to see BU becoming more selective…I hope the administration sees fit to continue to operate the College of General Studies as an alternative to allow less competitive students (3.3 gpa; 1785 SAT on average) to partake of the phenomenal BU/Boston experience. I realize that CGS “waters down” BU’s overall acceptance statistics, and probably increases BU’s overall acceptance rate…but BU is one of the very few first-class institutions that has always offered academic opportunity to a broader spectrum of college-bound students. To me, that’s what has always made BU a dynamic, diverse and egalitarian — versus a strictly elitist– intellectual haven.
AG Dumas
CAS ’73