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Wait list

Potential college place pending a vacancy

Wait list

Summary

Potential college place pending a vacancy

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Wait list, in university and college admissions, is a term used in the United States and other countries to describe a situation in which a college or university has not formally accepted a particular student for admission, but at the same time may offer admission in the next few months if spaces become available.{{cite magazine

Colleges mailing out wait list offers generally advise students to reserve a spot at a college they have been accepted to by sending in a deposit, usually several hundred dollars to guarantee that the student will have a place at any college in the fall. Later, if a student is accepted by a college from a wait list, and if he or she chooses to accept the wait list offer, it usually entails sacrificing that earlier deposit. In the United States, for students applying by regular admission, the month of April is a time when much activity happens; colleges email offers of acceptance and rejection, and students select a college by sending a deposit. In May, after receiving deposits, colleges know how many spots will be open, and will usually begin to offer admission to students on their wait lists as positions become open. Students can be offered admission from the wait list during May and June and throughout the summer.

According to several reports, colleges and universities use wait lists to try to hedge their guesses about how many students will ultimately decide to accept their offers of admission in any given academic year, with the idea being to build "a reservoir of qualified students to draw from to replace successful applicants who choose to go elsewhere." If fewer students say yes, then colleges will often go to their wait lists to try to find replacements. In 2010, according to one source, roughly 10% of college applicants were put on a wait list.{{cite magazine

Wait lists tend to be used by elite and selective universities as well as second-tier liberal arts colleges who are uncertain about how many students will show up in the fall; for example, Stanford and Yale put 1,000 students on their wait lists and Duke put 3,000 on their wait list, according to one report in 2010. Amherst takes 35 students from the 1,000 students on its wait list. And as a general rule, selective colleges and universities will usually have some form of wait list. Of the students on a wait list at a highly selective school, a fraction may be offered admission before classes begin in late August or September. One report said the fraction of wait-listed students who were eventually offered admission––as an average of all students wait listed in a given year––was 30%, but this is an overall average, and the fraction of wait-listed applicants to prestigious universities, who are eventually admitted, is much less. Students who are wait-listed can take steps to improve their chances of admission from a wait list by writing letters of interest and by sending second-semester senior grades.{{cite news

Yields and wait list acceptances

: Yields and Wait List Offers

College/UniversityYield (2024)Wait List Offers (2024)Wait List Acceptances (2024)Notes/Source
Harvard83%~2,00027Harvard CDS 2023-24
Stanford79%~1,40037Stanford CDS 2023-24
Yale70%~1,00046Yale CDS 2023-24
Princeton68%~1,30023Princeton CDS 2023-24
University of Pennsylvania66%~3,00057UPenn CDS 2023-24
Dartmouth62%~2,50051Dartmouth CDS 2023-24
Cornell60%~6,000192Cornell CDS 2023-24
Amherst43%~1,00018Amherst CDS 2023-24
Lafayette28%~1,10037Lafayette CDS 2023-24
UNC Chapel Hill44%~2,80082UNC CDS 2023-24
University of Iowa23%~1,5000Iowa CDS 2023-24
Connecticut College19%~90011Conn College CDS 2023-24
Colorado College36%~1,20024Colorado College CDS 2023-24

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Definitions

  • Yield: Percentage of admitted students who enrolled
  • Wait List Offers: Number of applicants offered a place on the wait list
  • Wait List Acceptances: Number of wait-listed students who were eventually offered admission and accepted

Notes

  • Data is for the Class of 2028 (entering Fall 2024)
  • Sources are official Common Data Set reports or institutional admissions data https://commondataset.org/

References

References

  1. Note: the deposit varies with the college
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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