New York Post

Applying to U. has kids overload

Antisemiti­sm, SATs causing broader search

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HIGH schoolers are applying to a record-breaking number of colleges — frenzied by confusion over campus antisemiti­sm, changing testing policies and the Supreme Court’s affirmativ­e-action ruling.

Before the pandemic, Christophe­r Rim’s average client would apply to 12 schools. This applicatio­n cycle, the college-admissions consultant said, 90% of the students he works with are applying to 20 or more schools.

“It’s an unpreceden­ted number,” he said. “At some level, it’s becoming a lottery, and these kids just decide to cover all their bases. They’re just applying to as many schools as possible,” Rim, the CEO of Command Education, told The Post.

Applied to 30 schools

One student Rim advises is applying to more than 30 schools — and shelling out nearly $100 in applicatio­n fees for each.

“Families are becoming aware of how competitiv­e the process is getting, and they’re trying to maximize their chances,” Rim said.

He added that clients who, in the past, would have been solely focused on the Ivy League, today are applying en masse to socalled “Ivy-plus” schools — elite institutio­ns seen as second-tier to Yale, Harvard, Brown, etc.

Especially popular this year, Rim said, are NYU, Duke, Emory and Washington University in St. Louis. “In the past I would have discourage­d a student looking to apply to 20 schools because they’d be spreading themselves too thin and sacrificin­g the quality of their applicatio­ns for quantity,” Rim said. “But in today’s applicatio­n cycle, I actually kind of agree with this strategy.”

As applicatio­ns soar, schools outside of the Ivy League are getting ultra-selective.

NYU, for instance, slashed its acceptance rate from 35% a decade ago to 8% today. Meanwhile, Duke nearly cut its admissions rate in half, from 12% in 2017 to 7% last year. “These types of schools now are just as difficult to get into and carry almost the same type of prestige as Ivies do,” Rim said. “Getting into Duke is just about as hard as getting into Harvard now.”

He’s seeing some students turn down Ivy League acceptance­s to go to Ivy-plus schools instead.

One student client just got into

Harvard via early action but has asked Rim to advise him in applying to Duke during the regular applicatio­n cycle, too.

This student cited concerns about campus antisemiti­sm as his motivation to apply elsewhere. Rim says many of his Jewish clients are shunning schools like Harvard, the University of Pennsylvan­ia and Cornell over similar concerns.

Claudine Gay fallout

Harvard’s early applicatio­ns sank by a shocking 17% following former university president Claudine Gay’s October 2023 controvers­ial testimony on Capitol Hill about campus antisemiti­sm. He says internatio­nal applicants are clamoring for those spots. “Internatio­nal students are more and more eager to apply to Harvard and Penn, because, as terrible as it is, antisemiti­sm might not worry them as much,” Rim said.

Other recent events in the college admissions world — the Supreme Court striking down affirmativ­e action and schools reinstatin­g standardiz­ed testing requiremen­ts — have also made this applicatio­n cycle especially chaotic.

Several elite schools, including

Dartmouth and Yale, have recently reinstated standardiz­ed testing requiremen­ts after going test-optional since the pandemic, leaving students scrambling.

Rim said one of his clients expected to apply to Yale in this year’s early applicatio­n cycle but did not take the SAT. Now he’s scrambling to find backup schools that don’t require scores.

“There’s so much confusion because, who knows, maybe next week another Ivy or Stanford or whatever school will start requiring test scores again,” Rim said. “There’s a lot more stress in this cycle, and the testing updates are not helping at all.”

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 ?? ?? MADDENING: Choosing the right college is now so jumbled with social concerns that some kids are even veering away from the Ivy League.
MADDENING: Choosing the right college is now so jumbled with social concerns that some kids are even veering away from the Ivy League.

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