Education.com

Early-Decision Programs (page 4)

By Tamara Holub
Educational Resource Information Center (U.S. Department of Education)

Defying NACAC Guidelines

Both Yale and Stanford Universities announced in November of 2002 that they will drop their early-decision programs in 2003, with applications for the 2004-5 academic year. Both universities plan to adopt a nonbinding early-action program that---in defiance of NACAC policy-- forbids early applicants to their schools from applying early to other colleges. NACAC policy stipulates that students are free to apply early to multiple colleges, as long as no more than one application is under a binding early-decision program. Yale University President Richard Levin called the NACAC policy "'ill-founded'" and said that '''colleges should be able to set their own policies about admission'" (Young, 2002). 

Conclusion

College and university administrators across the country are increasingly being called upon to reexamine their early-admission programs and their negative consequences. Though it is too early to determine the fate of the majority of early-decision programs-whether they will be maintained as they are, replaced by early action programs, modified in some new way, or ultimately discarded-there is clearly a movement afoot that advocates change. 

References

Arenson, K. (2001, December 21). Yale president wants to end early decisions for admissions. The New York Times, p. D1. 

Ehrenberg, R.G. (2000). Tuition rising: Why college costs so much. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 

Fallows, J. (2001, September). The early-decision racket. The Atlantic Monthly. Retrieved July 10, 2002 from http://www.theatlantic.com 

Gerson, M. (1998). The price of applying early. U.S. News America's best colleges. Washington, DC: U.S. News & World Report Inc., 68-70. 

Heller, A. (2002, January 18). Taking a gamble on the admissions game [Electronic version]. The Yale Herald. 

Hoover, E. (2002, January 11). New attacks on early decision [Electronic version]. The Chronicle of Higher Education, A45. 

Loftus, M. (2002, September 23). Early decision. U.S. News & World Report, 70. 

Lucido, J. (2002). Eliminating early decision: Forming the snowball and rolling it downhill. The College Board Review, No. 197, 4-29. 

National Association for College Admission Counseling (2001). Definitions of Admission decision options in higher education. Retrieved October 3, 2002 from http://www.nacac.com/downloads/policy_admission_options.pdf 

National Association for College Admission Counseling (2002). NACAC study shows college application numbers, financial aid requests on the rise. Retrieved October 28, 2002 from http://www.nacac.com/research_trends_snapshot.html 

Toor, R. (2001, January 26). Early decision and the politics of class [Electronic version]. The Chronicle of Higher Education, B16. 

Va. college to eliminate 'early decision' program. (2002, October 3). The Washington Post, p. A12. 

Young, J.R. (2002, November 22). Yale and Stanford End Early-Decision Options and Defy National Group [Electronic version]. The Chronicle of Higher Education, A58. 

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