<p>Anyone have any links to information about the experience similar LACs are having? How about comparable schools offering merit money like Davidson, Grinnell and Washington & Lee?</p>
<p>How do you figure? They said that ED will constitute 42% of the class. Therefore the total class is about 232/.42 = 552 students, leaving 552-232 = 320 left for RD. Williams’ yield rate is about 45% according to USNWR, so that means they’ll need to accept 320/.45 = 711 students to fill the class. So even if they deferred everyone they didn’t accept ED – for a total of 6001+382 = 6383 applicants in consideration – the accept rate is still going to be a little over 11%.</p>
<p>the 5.3% acceptance rate doesn’t even make any sense…
their RD rate last year wasn’t that low, and with less apps it can’t be that low this year.</p>
<p>a 20% drop in apps doesn’t mean a 20% increase in acceptance, but i do see the number of accepted students getting at the very least a little higher…</p>
<p>Not quite. Williams’ overall yield rate is 45%, but that includes both ED and RD applicants. The RD yield rate is closer to 25%. So they’ll likely need to accept around 1,200 RD to get the numbers they need. Combined with ED acceptances, that means an overall acceptance rate that’s closer to 20%.</p>
<p>The title of this thread is incorrect. The regular decision applicant rate did not drop 20%, the number of regular decision applications dropped 20%.</p>