friarwolf wrote:1309 SAT and acceptance rate under 50%. Good numbers but going for selectivity resulted in our smallest freshman class in quite a while..........
I am just sharing this because I find it interesting and is pretty relevant to this topic. As some of you know, my son is going through the college application process. The early admission deadline came and went November 1, 2015. My son did not apply early admission to SMU. Yesterday he received an email from the school extending his deadline to apply to November 8th and waiving his application fee. He scored a 2300 on the SAT and is a National Merit Scholar semifinalist. He receives more correspondence from SMU than any other school, so this is the type of student SMU is recruiting. Interestingly, the other in-state schools "recruiting" him most are A&M and Rice. Baylor has stopped sending information. TCU hasn't sent him anything. And UT has done nothing more than invite him to a football game hosted by the black alumni association. I share this because it demonstrates, in real time, what schools within in the state are doing to recruit top students and suggests that SMU is doing more than our in-state peers.
Likewise, the out of state "peer universities" aren't reaching out to him. Most correspondence we receive is from the Ivies; MIT; Stanford; USC; a number of elite, private liberal arts colleges; Ohio State, Michigan, Alabama, Oklahoma, and New Mexico. The state schools are money whipping us with the National Merit Scholarships. For example, OU is offering five years tuition waiver, an annual stipend, admission to their honors program with small classes, and other perks. They had more National Merit Scholars enroll last year than any other school in the nation and have quietly moved up the list of schools he's considering.
Finally, to answer the question of why he didn't apply to SMU by the November 1st deadline--he was turned off by last week's tweets, the frat parties, and the comments people made regarding those issues on boards like this. I know the thread on this topic was deleted, but I share this because potential students, or their parents, read what people post on boards like this and discuss it with their children who are considering applying to the university. So while we can post whatever we want on these public forums, we should do so with the knowledge that it can negatively impact the university as a whole.