I just got Tech Early Action stats from my son's top metro Atlanta public high school.
ADMITTED STUDENTS
Average GPA: 4.59
Average SAT: 1559
Average ACT: 35
Most accepted applicants to engineering majors did coursework BEYOND AP Calc BC and AP Physics C
This is mind-boggling. These are Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, MIT numbers.
I just got Tech Early Action stats from my son's top metro Atlanta public high school.
ADMITTED STUDENTS
Average GPA: 4.59
Average SAT: 1559
Average ACT: 35
Most accepted applicants to engineering majors did coursework BEYOND AP Calc BC and AP Physics C
This is mind-boggling. These are Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, MIT numbers.
I volunteer for our local alumni chapter and have served in a number of leadership roles. Each year, we award seven $1,000 scholarships to incoming freshmen. (Those are endowed scholarships thanks to some fantastic heavy lifting by past leaders.)
To apply for the scholarship, incoming students fill out an application provided by the alumni association. The candidates provide their test scores, extracurriculars and complete an essay. We then narrow down to a top 10-12 and interview the candidates at a Panera Bread for 30 minutes apiece.
I've been involved in various aspects of the above for almost 10 years now. The number of applicants has risen steadily as has their qualifications. Some of the applicants who don't make our final 10-12 in even just the latter half of my tenure have accomplished more in their first 17 years than I have in over 2x that time. Founders of start-ups, non-profits (some international), passed legislation at the state level, etc. We have ended up telling those who earn 1600's with other scholastic awards that they were not the most impressive candidates. Like @bwelbo, fairly sure I would no longer get in.
What's even more interesting/expected but a negative byproduct to my personal interests in the profoundly decreasing number of applicants who demonstrate any interest in sports. You can see the down slide via extracurriculars, the comments in their essays, and in the interviews. I also see it at Accepted Student Meet & Greets and Student Send-offs, where the incoming classes are not only deprioritizing the sports aspect of their college experience, but it's nearly nowhere on the radar for many. That is an extremely tough road to hoe for TStan and our coaches.
About 20% of nearly 18,800 regular decision applicants found out Saturday they were admitted. Among that number were Georgia students from 391 high schools and 107 counties.
Combining this crop of applicants with those admitted early action in January, 7,984 students were admitted to Georgia Tech this year for an overall acceptance rate of 20%, about the same rate as last year.
The school hopes to enroll about 3,250 freshmen in the class of 2024, said Tech admissions director Rick Clark Tuesday.
It remains more challenging to gain admission into Tech from out-of-state. The acceptance rate is 16% outside of Georgia, compared to 38% in-state.
(Despite the edge already given to Georgians, a bill in the Legislature would require that at least 90% of Tech’s early action admissions go to Georgia residents.)
The following stats are from the class of 2020 at Walton High School in East Cobb. NOTE: I hand counted the number of perfect scores from a scattergram so the numbers may be off by one or two. Otherwise, the data was direct from Naviance and reflects Walton only.
11 perfect SAT scores from one high school????
11 perfect SAT scores from one high school????
After looking at the graphs again, the perfect scores may be over three years. It's unclear.