Survey: Students settling for second-choice school
Report finds that costs of higher education is a factor in students' decision to settle for second best; 67.3 percent attend first-choice
MICHELLE GUTKNECHT
The Daily Vidette
Issue date: 1/30/07 Section: News
NORMAL, Ill. - An annual national survey conducted by University of California, Los Angeles reveals smaller percentages of college freshmen are attending their first choice schools, and even those accepted to their first choice are instead settling for their second or third choices.
The survey that yielded these results is The Freshman Survey, which has been administered by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at UCLA for the last 40 years.
This year 271,441 freshmen at 393 colleges across the nation were involved in the survey. While students were asked a variety of questions about high school life and college decisions, a major point of interest revealed by the survey results dealt with deciding factors that determine what school a student chooses to attend.
John H. Pryor, director of the Cooperative Institutional Research Program and the survey's lead author, said that the survey found that 67.3 percent of students polled were attending their first choice school, which is the second lowest percentage since researchers included this question on the survey in the mid-1970s.
The survey also found that among those students attending their second choice schools 48.9 percent had been accepted by their first choice school, but decided not to attend.
Pryor said a significant reason for the decline in attendance of first choice schools is the cost.
"What the results of the survey seem to be telling us is that financial issues is the main reason that students accepted to their first choice schools choose not to attend," Pryor said.
Charles A. Boudreau, director of Financial Aid, said students and parents not being entirely well informed about the full cost of their university or college of choice may be a contributing factor to this troublesome issue of finances.
"I try and emphasize to parents to go to the school's website early on and do research on overall cost, financial aid eligibility and scholarship opportunities."
The survey that yielded these results is The Freshman Survey, which has been administered by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program at UCLA for the last 40 years.
This year 271,441 freshmen at 393 colleges across the nation were involved in the survey. While students were asked a variety of questions about high school life and college decisions, a major point of interest revealed by the survey results dealt with deciding factors that determine what school a student chooses to attend.
John H. Pryor, director of the Cooperative Institutional Research Program and the survey's lead author, said that the survey found that 67.3 percent of students polled were attending their first choice school, which is the second lowest percentage since researchers included this question on the survey in the mid-1970s.
The survey also found that among those students attending their second choice schools 48.9 percent had been accepted by their first choice school, but decided not to attend.
Pryor said a significant reason for the decline in attendance of first choice schools is the cost.
"What the results of the survey seem to be telling us is that financial issues is the main reason that students accepted to their first choice schools choose not to attend," Pryor said.
Charles A. Boudreau, director of Financial Aid, said students and parents not being entirely well informed about the full cost of their university or college of choice may be a contributing factor to this troublesome issue of finances.
"I try and emphasize to parents to go to the school's website early on and do research on overall cost, financial aid eligibility and scholarship opportunities."
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