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Articles / Applying to College / Neither accepted or rejected by a college?

Neither accepted or rejected by a college?

Sally Rubenstone
Written by Sally Rubenstone | Feb. 11, 2002

Question: I've heard there is a way a college can neither accept or reject applicants. How can that be?

The Wait List is college admissions' no-man's-land. You're not in and you're not out. It's not a great place to be and it can be a form of disappointment and slowly fading hopes about being accepted to your most-favored school.


Waiting lists are most common at schools that always have an excess of quality applicants. Have you ever wondered how colleges and universities get just the right number of freshman to enroll every year? Part of it has to do with a term called yield; another aspect is the Wait List.

Let's suppose a college has 1,000 open slots for its new freshman class. After all the thousands of applications are reviewed and final admission decisions have been made, perhaps 2,000 letters of acceptance are sent out. After years of practice, this college knows that its yield is 50 percent. That means that, historically, half of those applicants offered admission will accept. It's a kind of natural phenomenon.

However, the college has to have a contingency plan just in case they don't quite get their 50 percent yield. That's where the Wait List comes in. The Wait List is made up of applicants who were just not quite good enough to be offered outright acceptance, but they have been judged capable of doing the college's level of work. In fact, some Wait List students are the equal of regular admits; there just isn't room to admit them all. If enrollment falls short in any given year, the college goes to its Wait List and offers admission to those students.

Wait Lists can be hundreds of names long. Some schools maintain Wait Lists but never use them because they have such a dependable yield. Whenever a school's yield goes up, there can be problems with housing accommodations. This is what happened some years ago at Penn State's University Park campus and at Princeton University for the first time in its 250-year history. Yield tends to remain relatively constant but can fluctuate with trends in popularity.

If you end up on a Wait List, don't hold your breath waiting to be accepted. Sometimes--at the last minute--a formerly enrolled student will withdraw his or her enrollment. That leaves a hole that can be filled from the Wait List. If you're on that Wait List, it could be you being offered admission. It's a very long shot, though. In most cases a student who is wait listed should pursue other colleges. There are avenues of persuasion such as a final flurry of personal marketing or letters of appeal from counselors or alumni, but these are usually not successful. I hope you're not wait listed.

Written by

Sally Rubenstone

Sally Rubenstone

Sally Rubenstone knows the competitive and often convoluted college admission process inside out: From the first time the topic of college comes up at the dinner table until the last duffel bag is unloaded on a dorm room floor. She is the co-author of Panicked Parents' Guide to College Admissions; The Transfer Student's Guide to Changing Colleges and The International Student's Guide to Going to College in America. Sally has appeared on NBC's Today program and has been quoted in countless publications, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Weekend, USA Today, U.S. News & World Report, Newsweek, People and Seventeen. Sally has viewed the admissions world from many angles: As a Smith College admission counselor for 15 years, an independent college counselor serving students from a wide range of backgrounds and the author of College Confidential's "Ask the Dean" column. She also taught language arts, social studies, study skills and test preparation in 10 schools, including American international schools in London, Paris, Geneva, Athens and Tel Aviv. As senior advisor to College Confidential since 2002, Sally has helped hundreds of students and parents navigate the college admissions maze. In 2008, she co-founded College Karma, a private college consulting firm, with her College Confidential colleague Dave Berry, and she continues to serve as a College Confidential advisor. Sally and her husband, Chris Petrides, became first-time parents in 1997 at the ripe-old age of 45. So Sally was nearly an official senior citizen when her son Jack began the college selection process, and when she was finally able to practice what she had preached for more than three decades.

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