Class of 2015 sets new applications record, College Confidential is like, meh.

Princeton received a record 27,115 applications for the class of 2015, according to a statement from the university. The number is a 3.3 percent increase from last year's 26,247 applications for the class of 2014, when applications jumped by almost 20 percent over the class of 2013.The university intends to enroll 1,300 freshmen in the fall, which means that the admission rate will definitely be over at least 5 percent."The depth of the applicant pool is impressive, and, as in previous years, we will have extremely difficult decisions to make in the coming weeks because of the quality of this year's applicants," Dean of Admission Janet Rapelye said in the statement. "With the increase in applications, it's clear that the University's academic excellence, students' unrivaled access to world-class faculty members and our generous financial aid policy continue to have tremendous appeal to prospective students."The biggest trend is online--only 1 percent of applicants submitted a paper version of the application (Why? Who are these 270 high school seniors?) and almost all of them applied with the Common Application.The 27,115 applications have set a record for the seventh year in a row, though the jump in applicants is markedly smaller than the 20 percent last year.College Confidential? Unimpressed.Screen shot 2011-01-19 at 3.45.12 PMUpdate:Other schools also set records...that were perhaps more impressive. (And that's why we do these posts, to impress ourselves.) Harvard received 35,000 applications, a 15 percent increase from last year, according to Bloomberg. Dartmouth and Penn saw similar jumps, and Brown saw a 2.9 increase to 31,000 students. Columbia saw applications rise 32 percent, to 34,587.One reason these schools are setting records year after year could be that it's getting easier than ever to apply to colleges, thanks to the Common App. According to the Cooperative Institutional Research Program's Freshman Survey, the percentage of students who applied to 7 or more colleges doubled to 23 percent from 1999 to 2009.

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