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Cover of The Hottest Seat on Campus, next to an image of the author Angel B. Pérez next to a collection of a speaker at a podium, a crowded campus and a bunch of books.

How to Survive as an Admissions Official

A new book, which deems the position of admissions dean to be “the hottest seat on campus,” highlights lessons learned from COVID-19 and the FAFSA fiasco.

Students at their desks writing in a classroom.

Socioeconomic Differences Among High Schools Drive Gap in College Outcomes

About a quarter of graduates from high-poverty high schools earn a college degree within six years. Their peers at low-poverty schools complete at more than double that rate.

A cross section of images showing students on the campuses of University of Minnesota Rochester, Lebanon Valley College, North Carolina A&T State University and the University of Connecticut from the beginning of the fall semester.

Fall 2025’s Unexpected Enrollment Successes

Colleges credit popular health sciences programs, increased dual enrollment, stepped-up retention efforts, new graduate programs and more for their record enrollments this fall.

In a lecture hall, a young blonde woman in the middle has her hand raised.

Dual Enrollment Leads to More College Acceptances, Greater Financial Awards

The studies add to a growing body of research about the impacts of dual enrollment, which allows high schoolers to take college courses and is growing more popular.

College Board Ends Tool That Shared Geographic Context With Colleges

Landscape, a College Board tool for providing colleges with information about the educational environment of an applicant’s high school and...
President Trump speaks at a podium while Attorney General Pam Bondi looks on, smiling, in a photo taken in February in the Oval Office.
Opinion

Let’s Talk About Proxies and Admission

The ultimate target of the administration’s scrutiny of college admission may be holistic review, Jim Jump writes.

A campus sign that reads "Office of Admissions."
Opinion

What Counts as ‘Unlawful Proxy Discrimination’?

The Trump administration mostly seems concerned about the use of “unlawful proxies” that would benefit Black and Hispanic students in admission, Catharine Hill writes.

Student engaged in research with a laptop and notebook in a library.

The Common App at 50

The organization that started with 15 private colleges now has more than 1,100 participating institutions. But closing equity gaps remains a top priority.