Association of American Universities Undergraduate (AAU) Admissions Analysis

Research Brief: What are Top US Universities’ Admissions Trends in 2021?

Jordan G., International Educational Consultancy

 

As of 2021, the US has 3,762 institutions of higher education. One third of them are two-year technical and community colleges. 19% are four-year special-focus colleges (non-comprehensive offering degrees primarily in one field of study). 19% are baccalaureate colleges (primarily offering bachelor degrees but not master or doctorate level degrees). 17% are master’s colleges (primarily offering all but doctorate level degrees). And, 12% are research universities (offering bachelor, master’s, and doctorate degrees). This last group, which receives most of the attention in the media, is the focus of this report. This report places no judgement on the other groups of schools, all of which can be a perfect fit for students depending on their needs and desires. The choice to focus on research universities is due to their particular appeal to international students and their families.


This report uses AAU member universities to represent what can be considered a group of high-quality comprehensive research universities – which seem to be appealing to international students. The report offers a broad overview of what these high-quality universities look like, what is needed for admission to these universities, and what typical test scores are for admitted applicants to these schools.

 

Among these 69 schools, the data indicate that the locations, admissions requirements, and test scores vary to quite a degree. Nevertheless, ranking of the school is clearly related to the selectivity and competitiveness of the school’s admission process. As such, it is important for students and their support networks to understand as much as possible about institutions of interest to best inform their decisions and maintain reasonable expectations.

RANK (2020) & AAU INSTITUTION (2023)

1 Princeton University

2 Harvard University

3 Columbia University in the City of New York

3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology

3 Yale University

6 Stanford University

6 University of Chicago

6 University of Pennsylvania

9 Northwestern University

10 Duke University

10 Johns Hopkins University

12 California Institute of Technology

12 Dartmouth College

14 Brown University

15 University of Notre Dame

15 Vanderbilt University

17 Cornell University

17 Rice University

19 Washington University in St Louis

20 University of California-Los Angeles

21 Emory University

22 University of California-Berkeley

22 University of Southern California

25 University of Michigan-Ann Arbor

25 Carnegie Mellon University

28 University of Virginia-Main Campus

29 Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus

29 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

29 New York University

29 Tufts University

29 University of Rochester

34 University of California-Santa Barbara

34 University of Florida

36 University of California-Irvine

37 University of California-San Diego

39 University of California-Davis

RANK (2020) & AAU INSTITUTION (2023)

40 Boston University

40 Brandeis University

40 Case Western Reserve University

40 Tulane University of Louisiana

46 University of Wisconsin-Madison

48 University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

48 The University of Texas at Austin

54 Ohio State University-Main Campus

57 The Pennsylvania State University

57 Purdue University-Main Campus

57 University of Pittsburgh-Pittsburgh Campus

57 University of Miami

62 Rutgers University-New Brunswick

62 University of Washington-Seattle Campus

64 University of Maryland-College Park

70 Texas A & M University-College Station

70 University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

70 George Washington University

79 Indiana University-Bloomington

79 University at Buffalo

84 Michigan State University

84 University of California-Santa Cruz

84 University of Iowa

91 Stony Brook University

91 University of California-Riverside

104 University of Colorado Boulder

104 University of Oregon

104 University of South Florida

104 University of Utah

117 Arizona State University Campus Immersion

117 University of Arizona

130 University of Kansas

139 University of Missouri-Columbia

Where are these high quality AAU Schools located?

States with  3+ AAU Members

What are some basic characteristics of these top schools?

 

AAU members are split according to public or private control. In terms of size, nearly two-thirds of AAU schools are large by US standards - over 20,000 students - while only a small number are 10,000 students or less. Half of AAUs are around 60% undergraduate students and 40% graduate students while a third have a vast majority of undergraduate students. One in five AAU schools have more graduate students than undergraduate. The majority of AAU schools offer undergraduate majors heavily focusing on arts and sciences over professions (e.g. business, engineer, health professional) though a small proportion (7%) focus more on the professions.

What materials are required for admission to AAU schools?

 

High School GPA is required, recommended, or considered by all schools except one. A student’s high school class rank (e.g. 1st in her class) is only required by four schools, but is recommended and considered in 47 schools with 18 schools not requiring it at all. High school transcripts are required at all but one school (still recommended there). Following a certain curriculum in high school, college prep courses, (not only the minimum requirements for a US diploma) is very important in all but three schools.  Recommendation letters present the first drastic difference between public and private AAU schools with all but one private AAU school requiring them (one recommends). About half of the public AAUs require, recommend, or consider recommendations, and the other half do need them. Formal demonstration of competencies is only required by four private schools while the vast majority of all schools do not want them.  Note that personal essays are also often required, but this data point was only added (and not yet available) for the 2021-2022 data collection cycle.

* These are not special courses. Rather, they are typical high school courses that colleges require students to take during high school (e.g. 8 sem. English; 7 sem. Math; 6 sem. Social Science; 6 sem. Science)

It is clear that admission test scores are following the US trend of being optional with the vast majority (48 schools) considering but not requiring them, which is the definition of test-optional. Still, seven schools require SAT or ACT and two recommend them. TOEFL scores (or presumably other English tests) are important for admissions at AAUs with only four schools not requiring nor recommending them.

How many applications do these top schools receive? And, how many are admitted?

 

Overall, AAU member universities received 3.5 million applications and admitted 1.2 million students amounting to a 35% admission rate. However, these applications and admissions vary according to control, school size, and USNWR ranking. Among the private and public AAUs, private universities admit a mere 11% of their applicants while public universities admit half of their applicants. In terms of size (student population), the size of the school proportionately reflects the both the number of applications received and students admitted. Ranking is a strong indicator or a school’s selectivity with the top 10 schools admitting only one in twenty applicants. Schools ranked among the top 50-140 admit 65-75% of their applicants. Nevertheless, there are five schools (public and private) that are in the top 50 and admit 40% or more of their applicants.

Top 50 Ranked AAU Schools which Admit 40% or More Applicants (Admission Rate, Rank)

SAT and ACT Scores at AAU Schools (Those which Accept Them)

 

Of the 69 AAU universities, 12 do not accept test scores; in addition, two more did not submit data to IPEDS about these scores. Therefore, test score analyses are based on 55 AAU universities (29 private and 26 public). Among these 55 universities, many are test-optional. For the top ten AAU schools, over 75% of the applicants submitted either SAT or ACT. For all other AAU schools, just over 60% submitted a test score. For test scores, the 75th percentile is reported – meaning that 75% (almost all) of the admitted students had this score or higher. One way for this to be understood is as a cautious minimum target. Scores on both SAT and ACT decrease according to rank on average with the those ranked in the top 25 having scores nearing the ceiling for the respective test section.

Here is the full report: 


What are Top US Universities Requiring for Admissions.pdf