Stanford accepts 753 in early action cycle

The Office of Undergraduate Admission announced Monday that 753 restrictive early action applicants, or 13.5 percent of the 5,566 early applicants, were accepted to Stanford. Almost as many early applicants were deferred to the regular decision cycle as accepted via early action.

“We deferred just over 700 students to regular decision,” Director of Undergraduate Admission Shawn Abbott wrote in an e-mail to The Daily. “Approximately 87 percent of students who applied for admission, however, received a final (admit or deny) admission decision.”

The 13.5 percent admit rate for early action applications represents an increase from the early action cycle in 2008, when Stanford accepted 12.8 percent of early action applications, or 689 early applicants from a pool of 5,363 applications.

This year’s total of 5,566 early action applications is the highest in the University’s history and represents an increase of almost 3.8 percent from last year’s previous record of 5,363 early applications.

While the date for announcement of early action admission results is Dec. 15, the admission office this year notified applicants of their admission statuses at 3 p.m. on Dec. 11, four days ahead of schedule.

“The admission committee finalized its selection process earlier than anticipated, and in an effort to quell anxiety among applicants, parents, counselors and alumni, [Admission and Financial Aid] Dean [Richard] Shaw made the executive decision to release decisions today, December 11,” the office announced on its Web site.

“Well over 90 percent of students opened their e-mail decisions within 72 hours, even though they were not expecting to receive their decision e-mails until December 15,” Abbott said.

In November, The Daily reported that 5,583 students had applied early action to Stanford. The discrepancy in the final tally results from the fact that the admission office allowed some students to change their application statuses from restrictive early action to regular decision.

Because restrictive early action is a non-binding option, admitted students will have until May 1 to respond to the University’s offer of admission.

  • Mark Seven

    Please refer to it as ‘Gimmick Admission’

  • john

    Why were so many applicants deferred. I thought it was Stanford’s policy to make a decision ASAP and allow students to move on with their application process.

    Either the whole class could be composed of early admits with a zero rate for regular decision students. Or most of those deferred will have experienced anxiety for months only to be disappointed.

  • Magic 8 Ball

    Shaw admitted several years ago that the early admission was based on, ‘ethnicity,celebrity, legacy and major donor” not academic qualification. ’nuff said.

  • calper

    Quite a few of those thousands of early pool deferees will be accepted later – enough of them, in fact, so that more than half the class of 2014 will be filled by people who applied early, signalling that Stanford was their first choice. Does wonders for the yield rate!

  • Brendan

    Magic 8 Ball: I was admitted EA, and I am not a minority, celebrity, legacy, or major donor. In fact, I am middle-class, white, and from an average high school. I know of another student in my dorm with similar qualifications who was admitted EA. Although the admissions may place greater emphasis on those factors in the early round, I think they are still looking for average joe applicants (you know those of us who didn’t cure cancer) that can demonstrate a strong desire to attend the University.