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Admissions

  • Ten Questions Presidents Should Ask Their Enrollment Deans

    Dr. Brian C. Mitchell

    Admissions is hard, grueling and anxiety-filled work today. It is as much an art as a science. The best enrollment leaders must have great gut instincts that allow them to see the relationship among strategic planning, university budgets, friend and fund raising, federal and state regulations, and a common vision set by the president and embraced by the university’s board of trustees. It’s about numbers but even more about how numbers support the academic program, differentiate it, and enhance program quality.

  • The Rising Cost of Higher Education: What Now?

    Rolling Stone

    On May 1st, as activists across the globe rallied in honor of International Workers' Day, a group of students from universities around New York City gathered in the tiny park in front of the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art's Foundation Building, where Cooper Union President Jamshed Bharucha's office is located. While the students spoke about struggles for justice on their campuses, above them, draped from a window, hung a banner that read, "Free Education To All." Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-rising-cost-of-higher-education-what-now-20130729#ixzz2aXiwKW49 Follow us: on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

  • College Enrollment Falls as Economy Recovers

    The New York Times

    The long enrollment boom that swelled American colleges — and helped drive up their prices — is over, with grim implications for many schools.

  • A Rainbow Over Catholic Colleges

    The New York Times

    “COME out of the closet in style!” read the poster, and on a crisp fall day, dozens of students on Georgetown’s Red Square did, metaphorically at least. They formed a winding conga line and sashayed through a life-size closet door. That afternoon, they gathered for same-sex smooching in a campus “kiss-in.”

  • Can A Facebook App Get Students Into Their Dream Schools?

    Good HQ

    The college application process can be pretty overwhelming, and overworked high school guidance counselors often don't always have the time to give individual students the personalized coaching they need. So where can students get help without hiring a private college adviser? A free Facebook app, Acceptly, wants to "take the guesswork out of getting into college" by coaching students through the process.