In a reversal of a bold policy that College
administrators once touted as a boon for lower-income students, Harvard
and Princeton University both announced yesterday that they will resume
the early admissions program for students applying this fall.
Concerned that such programs disadvantaged applicants from
underprivileged backgrounds, Harvard—followed by the University of
Virginia and Princeton—eliminated early admissions starting for the
Class of 2012.
When Harvard announced in 2006 that it would suspend its early
admissions program, the University sent shock waves through higher
education, and the move was seen as a step forward for increasing
access to education.
But in recent months, Harvard administrators have come to reconsider
the policy amid concerns that the College may be missing some of the
country’s most talented applicants.
“We looked carefully at trends in Harvard admissions these past years
and saw that many highly talented students, including some of the
best-prepared low-income and underrepresented minority students, were
choosing programs with an early-action option, and therefore were
missing out on the opportunity to consider Harvard,” Dean of the
Faculty of Arts and Sciences Michael D. Smith said in a statement.
Beginning with students applying for the classes of 2016, Harvard and
Princeton will both offer a single-choice early action application
option. While this practice does not require admitted students to
attend, it does prohibit students from applying to other schools’ early
action or early decision programs.
But experts said that yesterday’s decision—an abrupt departure from the
policy of the past four years—will dramatically alter the college
admissions landscape for students seeking spots at highly selective
universities.
Experts also question what has changed over the past four years to
justify the policy’s return. Early admissions programs have in the past
been considered beneficial for traditionally advantaged groups in the
college admissions process—such as athletes, legacies, and the children
of donors—but it remains unclear whether the return of early admissions
will have negative repercussions for lower-income students.
EARLY RETURNS
Even as he was singing the praises of a single admissions cycle five
years ago, Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons
’67 said that the College might reevaluate its decision within a few
years.
“If after several years with a single admissions deadline, we find
ourselves needing to reinstate early admission to preserve the quality
of our student body, we will return to early action,” he said in the
2006 statement which initially heralded the end of early action.
Describing the elimination as “an experiment” earlier this month,
Fitzsimmons reiterated the fact that the decision was always open to
review.
Fitzsimmons said that Harvard began seriously considering reinstating
early action this past summer. After months of review, the Office of
Admissions decided that the upswing in students applying to early
programs across the country, as well as students’ desire to gain entry
to Harvard earlier in the year, showed a need to resume early
admissions at the College.
“We started to hear that more and more people were applying early
across the country,” Fitzsimmons said. “Given the uncertainty that an
economic downturn entails—people look for the certainty that early
admission would provide.” He added that students are especially keen to
secure speedy admission to a school with generous financial aid like
Harvard.
Fitzsimmons pointed to rising numbers of early applications nationwide
as evidence that early action programs have now become available to a
larger pool of students than in 2006, when the College did away with
the program.
University President Drew G. Faust said in a statement yesterday that
the return of early action is now “consistent with our bedrock
commitment to access, affordability, and excellence.”
Princeton President Shirley M. Tilghman also said in a statement that
she believes that renewing early admissions will allow her school to
better recruit students from underrepresented groups.
“By reinstating an early program, we hope we can achieve two goals:
provide opportunities for early application for students who know that
Princeton is their first choice, while at the same time sustaining and
even enhancing the progress we have made in recent years in
diversifying our applicant pool,” she said.
Fitzsimmons noted that applicants will gain no additional favor for
choosing to apply in the early round rather than the regular cycle.
NO WORM FOR THE EARLY BIRD
When Harvard announced the elimination of early action in 2006,
University officials hailed the move as a progressive step that would
both help Harvard recruit students from underrepresented groups and
ease the stress of the admissions process for students of all
backgrounds.
Fitzsimmons told The Crimson in 2006 that the removal of early
admission was “certainly a win for students in the bottom quarter and
bottom half of the income distribution.”
At the time, the University argued that low-income students were
hindered from participating in early admissions programs since they
needed to apply to many schools in order to compare financial aid
offers from multiple institutions.
In addition, Harvard administrators said that wealthier students had
greater access to the resources needed to put together a successful
college application by the Nov. 1 early action deadline.
“Early admission programs tend to advantage the advantaged,”
then-Interim University President Derek C. Bok said in a statement.
“Students from more sophisticated backgrounds and affluent high schools
often apply early to increase their chances of admission, while
minority students and students from rural areas, other countries, and
high schools with fewer resources miss out.”
At the time of the announcement, Harvard administrators said that they
hoped that many top universities would follow in Harvard’s footsteps,
but only Virginia and Princeton did away with their early decision
programs.
Some experts said that while the prestige of schools like Harvard and
Princeton allowed them to eliminate early admission, other schools
could not do so without significantly damaging the quality of their
applicant pools.
“Other schools can’t afford to do away with early,” Amy Sack, president
of admissions consulting company Admissions: Accomplished, said in an
interview with The Crimson yesterday. “An early plan is very important
to some schools, though it’s not maybe to schools like Harvard, Yale,
Princeton, or Stanford,” which high-caliber high school seniors will
apply to regardless of their application deadlines.
Despite the fact that only two schools mimicked Harvard’s policy during
the past five years, independent Conn. college counselor Gay S. Pepper
said she believes that Harvard changed the admissions climate for the
better by temporarily eschewing early admissions.
“It sent a real shock wave. A lot of colleges realized that early
decision wasn’t benefiting the students. Many colleges started
[non-binding] early action programs instead,” Pepper said. “It was a
very daring move.”
LEVELING THE PLAYING FIELD?
According to admissions experts, the reinstatement of early admissions
programs at both Harvard and Princeton will fundamentally alter the
dynamics of college admissions.
“This is a seismic shift,” said Michael Goran, director and educational
consultant at IvySelect, a college counseling firm in California. “I
really do believe that it creates a new dynamic.”
The four institutions that many consider the nation’s preeminent
universities—Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford—now all offer
non-binding single-choice early action programs. According to college
counselors, students hoping to attend one of these schools are now
likely to apply early to their first choice and attend if admitted,
rather than apply to more schools and make up their minds in May.
“I think it will be the most earth-shattering for Yale,” said Sack,
saying that in the past five years, students often applied early to
Yale even if Harvard or Princeton was their first choice. Next year,
Sack hypothesized, Yale’s early applications will decrease as those
students migrate to Harvard and Princeton.
Experts said that Harvard stands to directly benefit from the new policy and will likely see a higher yield in the future.
“You’re not committed to the school, but at the end of the day, chances
are you have already psychologically committed by applying early action
in the first place,” Goran said, arguing that Harvard can now draw top
students through its early action program.
Others were skeptical of the College’s claim that the reinstated early
program will be equally accessible to students from diverse
backgrounds. Cigus Vanni, a guidance counselor at Cherry Hill High
School in New Jersey, said that early admission has traditionally been
used to guarantee admission to athletes, legacies, and the children of
donors as quickly as possible. Predicting that this trend will start
again with the rebirth of Harvard’s early action program, Vanni said
that having these candidates in the pool may boost the early admission
rate, causing acceptance during the early cycle to appear deceptively
easy.
Current applicants to the College interviewed by The Crimson yesterday
reported that they would have applied early to Harvard had the option
been available.
—Gautam S. Kumar contributed reporting to this story.
—Staff writer Justin C. Worland can be reached at jworland@college.harvard.edu.