<p>Matt McGann of MIT has posted links to some fascinating info on international admissions in his blog here:
<a href=“http://matt.mitblogs.com/archives/2006/07/international_c.html[/url]”>http://matt.mitblogs.com/archives/2006/07/international_c.html</a>.</p>
<p>It was interesting to learn that Mount Holyoke was #2 in total dollars awarded to international students! </p>
<p>Here is the top 20 list linked in Matt’s post along with total aid awarded to internationals:</p>
<p>Harvard College $16,040,000
Mount Holyoke College $9,965,568
MIT $8,628,074
Yale University $7,072,947
Penn $7,023,134
Princeton University $7,001,400
Middlebury College $6,625,464
Macalester College $5,658,194
Cornell University $5,500,000
Stanford University $5,316,768
Oberlin College $4,906,710
Colby College $4,781,112
Drexel University $4,628,310
Dartmouth College $4,576,777
Colgate University $4,405,382
U of Southern California $4,387,277
Wellesley College $4,194,070
U of Texas at Austin $4,060,000
Vassar College $3,926,963</p>
<p>Mount Holyoke is much smaller than the other schools at the top of the list–Harvard, MIT, Yale, Penn, or Princeton (and its endowment is smaller as well)–so it’s interesting that MHC places such a high priority on international admissions.</p>
<p>17% of the MHC student body is international. According to their website, their tradition of international students goes back a long way.</p>
<p>My image of MHC is definitely changing–between their 140 Frances Perkins scholars (non-traditional age) and their 400 foreign students, it’s a very different and far more diverse place than I would have imagined.</p>
<p>As Matt McGann of MIT says: MHC’s “support of international students is perhaps the most impressive of all American colleges.”</p>