Sunday, June 28, 2020
MIT Students Receive $20,000 to Defer
According to a Wall Street Journal article, too many students enrolled in MIT Sloan this year, forcing the Sloan admissions committee to ask for volunteers to postpone their studies for a year. What went wrong? How did the school get the numbers wrong? The article goes on to explain the concept of ââ¬Å"summer melt,â⬠a term used in admissions circles to describe the dropping out of students from the pre-summer pool of incoming students. This year, according to Rod Garcia, senior admissions director at Sloan, ââ¬Å"a higher-than-expected number of students stuck with their plans to attend.â⬠To balance out the numbers, the program, just weeks before school began, sent out letters to the members of the incoming class offering guaranteed admission to the following yearââ¬â¢s class. When that didnââ¬â¢t work to get the number of incoming students down, the school offered students a $15,000 scholarship if they postponed their studies a year. When pre-term classes began on September 21st and there still werenââ¬â¢t enough takers, Sloan upped the offer to $20,000. Only four students took the bait ââ¬â including one woman who had already quit her job, sold her car, and rented an apartment in Cambridge ââ¬â bringing the class down to 413 students, up from last yearââ¬â¢s 404. Other programs have offered money for deferrals in the past, include MITââ¬â¢s masters in finance program last year, and Yale SOM in 2006. Implications MIT will be a little stingier with offers of admission. MITââ¬â¢s admissions office did a great job in selecting students who really want to attend MIT. While this ââ¬Å"mistakeâ⬠may be mildly discomfiting, it really reflects an admissions office thatââ¬â¢s doing a better-than-expected job. Kudos. à Accepted.com ~ Helping You Write Your Best
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