BCHistory Posted December 17, 2009 Posted December 17, 2009 (edited) I saw another thread on here about a week ago where members were discussing the very difficult task of finding departments' admissions statistics for the previous year. I thought I would start a thread where we could post our findings, whether they come from the departments themselves or from the graduate schools. I've been doing some investigative work, digging through some departmental websites, and I have found a bit of information. I'll start this off with the History Department of the University of South Carolina: "For the 2009-2010 academic year, there were 180 applicants for our graduate programs; 21 enrolled (ten in the Ph.D. program and 11 in the M.A. in Public History program). This class has an average GRE score of 1220 on two of the three components of the exam and an average undergraduate GPA of 3.50." Source: http://bulletin.sc.e...72&returnto=654 Anybody who has information for other schools, please feel free to post. It's been pretty difficult to find for most departments, but maybe we can pool together information for all of the various departments to which we've applied and come up with a decent list. Edited December 17, 2009 by BCEmory08
Caligula Posted December 17, 2009 Posted December 17, 2009 The History Department at Northwestern is very open about their stats, including admission stats. They give acceptance rates in percengtages of the past 5 years. If I remember correctly, a whopping 9.6% were admitted to the Ph.D. progrm last year.
swissmiss Posted December 17, 2009 Posted December 17, 2009 UNC: http://gradschool.unc.edu/admissions/stats.html UMINN: http://www.grad.umn.edu/data/stats/1038000.html
LifeIsGood Posted December 17, 2009 Posted December 17, 2009 http://www.yale.edu/graduateschool/academics/profiles/history.pdf Interesting to see that when I visited this site last year, it said that 384 people applied and 26 were accepted (6.7%) in Fall 2008. For Fall 2009, it changed to 435 applying and 21 being accepted (4.8%). It's trending in a most unpleasant direction.
LifeIsGood Posted December 17, 2009 Posted December 17, 2009 Oop. My bad. The Yale number given was enrolled, not accepted. So the percentage accepted was something higher than that.
BCHistory Posted December 17, 2009 Author Posted December 17, 2009 (edited) Oop. My bad. The Yale number given was enrolled, not accepted. So the percentage accepted was something higher than that. I was just going to mention this. I can see why some lower-ranked schools might not provide their acceptance rates, but I would guess that the percentage of people who are accepted at Yale who go on to enroll would be extremely high. Edited December 17, 2009 by BCEmory08
BCHistory Posted December 17, 2009 Author Posted December 17, 2009 (edited) And thank you to those who have posted so far for the great finds! Edited December 17, 2009 by BCEmory08
peppermint.beatnik Posted December 17, 2009 Posted December 17, 2009 I applied to Religion Ph.D. at Columbia last year. I followed-up with them. Their percentage admit is 3% (one per sub-field). I would image it's similar in other dept. in the GSAS.
longshanks Posted December 18, 2009 Posted December 18, 2009 Someone else alluded to this, but remember that number of students enrolled doesn't equal number accepted. My husband was accepted to USC last year, but he enrolled at a different university.
longshanks Posted December 18, 2009 Posted December 18, 2009 Here's Harvard's info: http://history.fas.harvard.edu/programs/graduate/admission/index.php Incoming class: 16 students Percentage of applicants accepted: 8%
TMP Posted December 18, 2009 Posted December 18, 2009 Michigan used to give out about 36 offers for a yield of 18-20 students a year out of nearly 400 applications. Since 2009 admissions and for this coming year, they've changed their policy. Now they plan to make only 20 offers, and just have a larger waitlist so they don't overyield because of funding issues. And still nearly 400 applications.
jacib Posted December 18, 2009 Posted December 18, 2009 Michigan used to give out about 36 offers for a yield of 18-20 students a year out of nearly 400 applications. Since 2009 admissions and for this coming year, they've changed their policy. Now they plan to make only 20 offers, and just have a larger waitlist so they don't overyield because of funding issues. And still nearly 400 applications. Someone mentioned Northwestern, but check out the intense level of statistics they offer for every program: http://www.tgs.northwestern.edu/pgm_stats/ Its almost too much information; it not only gives you admission statistic but attrition rates, placements (even listing the school name), years to degree, etc.
misterpat Posted December 23, 2009 Posted December 23, 2009 (edited) I'm not sure if average GPAs and GREs are all that important. That being said, I'm pretty sure Duke has them on their website somewhere. I think average numbers of applicants vs. number admitted is a more interesting stat. One department that I didn't apply to but that I recall noticing was kind of a high acceptance-rate was University of Kansas, where about 1/3 of applicants are admitted. Pretty high for a top 50 program. The location is probably a big factor. Edited December 23, 2009 by misterpat
insideout09 Posted February 1, 2010 Posted February 1, 2010 On 12/23/2009 at 5:44 PM, misterpat said: I'm not sure if average GPAs and GREs are all that important. That being said, I'm pretty sure Duke has them on their website somewhere. I think average numbers of applicants vs. number admitted is a more interesting stat. One department that I didn't apply to but that I recall noticing was kind of a high acceptance-rate was University of Kansas, where about 1/3 of applicants are admitted. Pretty high for a top 50 program. The location is probably a big factor. Does anyone know anything about the admissions statistics for WUSTL?
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