Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pitt again reports record-breaking number of first-year applicatio­ns

- By Maddie Aiken

The University of Pittsburgh has yet again seen a record-breaking number of first-year applicatio­ns to its Oakland campus.

Pitt Chancellor Joan Gabel said during Thursday’s Board of Trustees meeting that nearly 60,000 prospectiv­e students vied for a spot at the university during the most recent applicatio­n cycle.

That tops last year’s record of over 58,200 applicants and the 2022 record of over 53,000 applicants.

Ms. Gabel attributed the rise to the university’s efforts to bolster its recruitmen­t. She specifical­ly mentioned the quality of Pitt’s programs and the school’s heightened focus on rural recruitmen­t over the past two years.

“[That] is a wonderful combinatio­n that is drawing the interest of a large number of students,” Ms. Gabel said after the board meeting. “We are not surprised, but happy, to see a strong number of applicatio­ns.”

Like universiti­es across the country, Pitt is seemingly benefiting from a post-COVID surge in applicatio­ns. Just three years ago, the university only received about 34,600 applicatio­ns.

And in 2013, about 27,600 people applied to join the school’s freshman class. Applicatio­ns more than doubled a decade later.

A fall analysis by the Post-Gazette found that most regional schools have reported applicatio­n growth since the onset of the pandemic.

Experts have attributed surges to several factors, including test-optional admissions and the popularity of the Common App, which allows students to easily submit their applicatio­ns to multiple colleges in one fell swoop.

But despite a large applicatio­n pool, Ms. Gabel said the university is not exactly sure how many freshmen will be on its Oakland campus come fall.

She attributed that to complicati­ons with the updated FAFSA form.

Students across the country are still waiting to receive financial aid offers from colleges as the Department of Education’s rollout of the new FAFSA form has been muddied with delays and miscalcula­tions.

Pitt officials have said the university plans to send out financial aid offers to undergradu­ate students the week of April 22.

Because of delays, many schools — including Pitt — have pushed back their commitment deadlines from May 1 to May 15. That will give incoming freshmen roughly a month to weigh their collegiate options with a full financial picture in mind.

Ms. Gabel said Pitt is looking into pushing the deadline back further, but a decision has yet to be made.

“What we’re going to do is put the needs of the students first,” she said. “They’re absolutely the priority. This is tough, there’s no question about it, but as tough as it is for us, it’s even tougher for them.”

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