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So you've decided to apply to Duke. Ever wonder what happens to
your application after you turn it in?
Once you submit part one of the application, which includes personal
data such as name, address, and high school, admissions staff members
create a file for you. All the parts of your application--high-school
report, test scores, teacher recommendations, and essays--are assembled
here as they are received. Duke also invites you to submit an additional,
personal recommendation written by someone other than a teacher,
such as a parent, coach, or friend. "The D," the admissions
office's online communications system, allows you to see when each
piece has been received and processed. (https://www.admissions.duke.edu/jump/thed/).
You can also use it to send messages to admissions officers and
receive information about Duke programs related to your interests.
After your file is created, you are invited to take part in an
interview with an alumnus or alumna in or near your hometown. These
are not required, but, according to admissions staff members, can
help give the admissions committee additional insights into who
you are. They say that, more often than not, the interviewer's
comments about an applicant confirm what they have already seen
in other parts of the application, but sometimes can provide important
additional information. The interview also gives you an opportunity
to ask the alumnus or alumna questions about Duke. On-campus interviews
have been eliminated, in order to be fair to those unable to visit
campus.
When complete, your admissions file is passed along to a "first
reader" outside the admissions staff who is trained in reading
applications. The reader goes over your application, then fills
out an assessment form that includes a breakdown of your grades
by year and level of difficulty (regular, honors, A.P./I.B.), important
bits of information gleaned from teacher and counselor recommendations,
and a "bottom line" assessment of your case for admission.
Using a five-point scale, he or she rates you in each of six areas:
rigor of high-school academic program, academic performance, letters
of recommendation, extracurricular activities and personal qualities,
personal statement and essay, and standardized testing. The standards
for receiving a five in each category are high. For instance, reaching
the cut-off for a five in testing usually requires SAT scores in
the mid-1500s; to receive a five in recommendations, a student
must be recognized by teachers as one of the best they've ever
had.
After your file is reviewed by the first reader, it is passed along
to the admissions officer in charge of your region. There are sixteen
in all; their work includes visiting high schools and staffing
local college fairs. They have information about your school and
your region and can put your grades and recommendations in context.
They can also refer to historical records to see what types of
students were accepted from your school in the past. They go over
the reader response card, adding or tweaking insights about you,
and determine their own set of rankings, which may vary slightly
from those of the first reader.
Children of alumni are granted a third read to make certain that
nothing important was missed. Admissions officers say that legacy
status is taken into account in the process, because children of
alumni bring a familiarity with and continuity of Duke traditions
to the class. However, it is just one of the many factors that
admissions officers consider in reviewing an application. Legacies
are admitted at about twice the overall rate.
As the regional officers review their applicants, they designate
some as clear admits or denies, sending those on to admissions
dean Christoph Guttentag or one of his associate directors to be "auto-admitted" or "auto-denied." Guttentag
estimates that the top 5 percent and the bottom third of the applicant
pool are handled this way. The remainder moves on to admissions
committee rounds, a succession of meetings in which staff members
weigh each applicant's merits and deficiencies.
Your regional officer acts as an advocate for you, using notes
from the assessment form to point out the highlights of your application
to other officers. Though there are no exact regional quotas, officers
have a general idea as to how many students will be admitted overall
and from their respective regions, based on the formula used to
determine the number of admits that will yield the desired class
size.
By the end of all the rounds, admissions officers admit just under
4,000 applicants for about 1,600 spaces in the freshman class.
If you apply early decision, you receive your notification letter
in mid-December. Notifications for regular admissions arrive in
early April. Decisions can also be accessed online the same day
that letters are mailed, and if you're like most applicants, you'll
choose to take advantage of this feature. Last year, 2,000 applicants
logged on in the first five minutes after decisions became available;
some 10,000 within the first twenty-four hours.
-Jacob Dagger
The Duke Alumni Association offers assistance to children of alumni
interested in applying to Duke.
For more information, contact Carole LeVine '86,director of Duke's
alumni admissions program, (919) 684-5114 or carole.levine@daa.duke.edu.
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