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Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports that with a weak economy and a record number of applications at many campuses, admissions deans have deliberately undershot their targets and lengthened their waiting lists. For months a four-digit number has hovered over Douglas L. Christiansen. It's there when he falls asleep and there when he wakes up. The number is 1,550,…
Descriptors: College Admission, Enrollment Projections, Deans, Admissions Officers
Hoover, Eric; Supiano, Beckie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Admissions deans everywhere shared concerns about recruiting students during a recession as they tried to discern how, or if, the economy would affect demand for their institutions. Amid this uncertainty, colleges used many different strategies. Some recruited more here and less there. Some offered more merit aid, while others scaled back. Some…
Descriptors: High School Freshmen, Deans, Administrator Attitudes, School Surveys
Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Last year the National Association for College Admission Counseling (Nacac) asked William R. Fitzsimmons, dean of admissions and financial aid at Harvard University, to lead a panel that would examine testing issues and recommend how colleges might better use entrance exams. The dean and his fellow panelists were to present their findings this…
Descriptors: Testing, Standardized Tests, College Admission, Deans
Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Jeff Rickey is a numbers guy. But three years ago, a colleague asked him about something he'd never counted: applicants who came out of nowhere. The question intrigued Mr. Rickey, dean of admissions and financial aid at Earlham College in Indiana. He found that 17 percent of the college's applicants that year had not called, taken a tour, or…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Enrollment Management, Deans, College Applicants
Farrell, Elizabeth F.; Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
At the annual conference of the National Association for College Admission Counseling (Nacac), admissions deans and high-school counselors gathered in September 2007 to grapple with questions such as: (1) Rethinking the role of standardized tests in admissions (many attendees predict that psychometric giants ACT and SAT, will not always dominate…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Psychometrics, School Counselors, College Admission