Word: matriculateã
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According to Fitzsimmons, the College’s decision to eliminate its early action program this year and the recent expansion of its financial aid program make this year’s yield—the percentage of admitted students who matriculate??€”hard to predict. The more conservative acceptance rate is an effort to ensure that the College does not admit more students than it can accommodate...
Dean of Admissions William R. Fitzsimmons ’67 said that since the new program could boost Harvard’s yield—the number of admitted students who matriculate??€”the admissions office may accept a smaller class this year...
...April 1982—before Harvard learned which of the students accepted to the Class of 1986 would actually matriculate??€”Fitzsimmons told The Crimson that the 1982 yield could drop because of national economic pressures or rise because some competing colleges had not reaffirmed aid-blind admissions, as Harvard...
...student Cavalier Daily that though the university had been considering abandoning early admissions for two years, the decision’s timing was spurred specifically by Harvard and Princeton’s decisions. Virginia’s yield rate—the percentage of accepted students who choose to matriculate??€”is lower than either Princeton’s or Harvard’s. Virginia’s yield is 53 percent, while Princeton’s is over 69 percent, and Harvard’s is 80 percent. In waiting until the spring to release its admissions decisions...
...Marlyn McGrath-Lewis ’70-’73 and University President Lawrence H. Summers pitched the University’s line: that the policy switch would take stress off Byerly Hall and allow the admissions office to focus only on students who can legally choose to matriculate??€”all while making applicants better...