For many who applied to UGA, the news was not good
BRITTANY COFER
Issue date: 4/1/09 Section: News
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At least half of the admissions pool was denied entry for the fall, University President Michael Adams told administrators last month.
"This shapes up to be the most difficult April on admissions that we've had," he said. "Many, many young people who would have been admitted here five or 10 years ago, maybe even into the Honors Program, are going to be disappointed."
Samantha Bowden is one of those students. The senior at Woodstock High School expected to be admitted when she applied - given her high GPA and four Advanced Placement credits.
But Bowden was notified Friday that she would not be attending the University in the fall, even after being deferred from early admission.
"The worst part was - why would they defer me just to deny me in the next round?" she told The Red & Black in an interview Sunday. "Especially since my grades improved since the last semester."
Since Bowden was deferred, she had to reapply - which meant another $50 application fee, another set of essays and another long application to fill out.
But Bowden said she has a back-up plan and is thankful she planned ahead.
"Luckily before I found out I got denied, I decided I wanted to go to [Georgia] State," she said. "I was tired of waiting [on UGA]. It was taking so long."
Adams warned top administrators to expect calls from people denied admission for the fall. But Bowden said the people she knows who were denied aren't planning to complain.
"It's getting harder [to be admitted], and I think people realize that - especially after this year," Bowden said. "[My friends] had back-up schools and that's where they just have to go."
Emma Ensley, a senior at Dalton High School, said she knows many classmates who were denied admission, but she has not heard of anyone planning to call the admissions office.
Adams said 1,000 applicants were accepted Friday, on top of the 7,360 students the University already has admitted. The University has a goal of 4,800 new students to attend in the fall - the same goal as last year - said Tom Jackson, vice president for public affairs.
"There may be another 200 in January, for a total of 5,000," he said in a phone interview Monday.
But with economic conditions, more students might decide to stay in state.
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Perturbed
posted 4/01/09 @ 12:30 PM EST
It would be great if the reporter did a little fact checking -- students who are deferred from early admission have to complete an additional short answer section and provide information as to their extracurriculars. (Continued…)
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