APPLICATIONS to Harvard College fell 5 per cent from a year ago after a tumultuous period that included the resignation of its president and a defeat at the Supreme Court.
The school said 54,008 students sought admission for next fall’s freshman class. That marked the second consecutive year that Harvard’s undergraduate applications declined. They are down from 61,220 two years ago, when numbers soared after colleges scrapped requirements for standardised testing to adjust to the pandemic.
It is unclear what drove the decline in the numbers, which still show extraordinary interest in attending the oldest and richest US College. The school accepted just 3.6 per cent of applicants.
In contrast, Yale University reported 57,465 applicants, the largest pool in its history and almost 10 per cent more than the previous year. Duke University and Dartmouth College also saw similar jumps, and the University of Pennsylvania’s applications rose more than 9 per cent to 65,000, the most of the cohort that reported.
The admissions landscape is being closely watched after the Supreme Court ruled in June against Harvard and the University of North Carolina that race could not be a factor in admissions. Some of the schools have also been roiled by allegations of antisemitism after the Oct 7 Hamas attack on Israel, with Harvard and Penn facing particular scrutiny from alumni and lawmakers.
Harvard disclosed data in December that showed applications for non-binding early admissions declined 17 per cent. It was unclear why the numbers fell so sharply, but it fuelled concerns among alumni and donors that the school’s reputation was being tarnished.
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Regular applications for fall 2024 were due Jan 1. The next day, Harvard president Claudine Gay resigned from her post after she was accused of plagiarism and for her widely criticised testimony about antisemitism at the college at a congressional hearing in December. Penn’s president, Liz Magill, also resigned after the hearing, in which both gave narrow legal responses to whether calling for the genocide of Jews was against school policy.
Citing the Supreme Court ruling, Harvard said it would not access self-reported information about the race and ethnicity of applicants this year until the admissions process is over. But the school shared other facts about the class of 2028, which will begin studying in the fall semester at the campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Harvard admitted 1,937 students for the class, which will comprise about 53 per cent women and 47 per cent men. The Mid-Atlantic region accounted for the most students, with 20 per cent of the total. That was down from about 22 per cent a year earlier. In addition, 21 military veterans were admitted.