(Bloomberg) -- Harvard College received 17% fewer applications for early admission from high school seniors this year, the lowest total in four years, according to the school’s website.
Harvard said it received 5% fewer undergraduate applications this year compared with a year earlier, a dip that follows a tumultuous year for the Ivy League school that included the resignation of ...
Harvard College faced a decrease in applications attributed to recent controversies, impacting its standing among potential applicants. Ivy Day revealed mixed application trends with Brown ...
Harvard College faces a setback as applications drop by 5% compared to the previous year. This decline coincides with a turbulent period marked by the resignation of its president and a ...
Applications to Harvard College fell by about 5 percent this year, a small decline that comes after a tumultuous year at the school marked by the dramatic downfall of its president and a Supreme Court ...
Harvard said it accepted 1,937 students for the class of 2028, translating to an admissions rate of 3.58%. That’s up from last year’s rate of 3.41%, which was the second-lowest in school history.
The intentional step by what appears to have been someone inside Harvard Yard to cut a lock on the Johnston Gate during a ...
Harvard University’s annual applications have fallen for the second year in a row after multiple controversies embroiled the school. The school said this week it had 54,008 applicants for the class of ...
Harvard has named an alumnus and Stanford professor as the next dean of its John F. Kennedy School of Government.
Applications to Harvard College were down this year, even as many other highly selective schools hit record highs. The drop suggests that a year of turmoil — which went into overdrive with a student ...
Last year, the school had 56,937 applicants, meaning 2024 saw a drop of 5 percent. Harvard had a record number of applications in 2021 — more than 57,000. It then set a new record in 2022 with ...