Yep. Top 13%, full AP/Dual credit schedule, Spanish immersion bilingual, 4H leader, 4-year varsity athlete, 100+ CS hours. Not A&M material
The recruitment part seems a little drastic. Dont take your (and mine) frustration out on the kids.NomadicAggie said:
In the same boat here. I know A&M doesn't care and the system is specifically set up to discriminate against kids like mine (suburban high school), but it cuts both ways.
12th man foundation - Not another dollar
School donations - Not another dollar
Recruitment - I work for an iconic Texas energy company (everyone here would know it) and am in charge of recruitment. I am making zero effort to come back to campus to interview anyone again.
I'm sure A&M understands, it's just business.
bmks270 said:
University admissions are very subjective.
I know of lots of great students that didn't get accepted to places that is a bit shocking. All ended up doing great however, because they make themselves, not the particular university.
double b said:bmks270 said:
University admissions are very subjective.
I know of lots of great students that didn't get accepted to places that is a bit shocking. All ended up doing great however, because they make themselves, not the particular university.
That is mainly true for the very selective institutions (less than 20% acceptance rates), but those students typically possess very impressive academic resumes and test scores. Their essays and unique backgrounds essentially separate one candidate from another.
Texas A&M is not in that category of schools. Historically, we've admitted more than 60% of our applicants, although Blinn Team primarily inflates those numbers. So traditionally, a solid academic student coupled with equally good test scores and essays could feel confident about their admissions chances. At the very least, receive Blinn Team.
I think what happened this year is that Texas A&M admitted way too many students last year and a larger percentage matriculated than expected. The main campus welcomed 11,100 new students this Fall 2021 semester. For the Fall 2020 semester, TAMU enrolled 10,039 students, and that's an 11% increase from the previous year. No school plans to increase their enrollment by that much.
Overall, I don't think TAMU was expecting such an increase from the following year, coupled with a continued rise in applications due to Test-Optional policies, and you have this calamity of admission decisions this year. Texas A&M was going to continue to recruit their designated populations in hopes of increasing those numbers, which unfortunately, came at the sacrifice of suburban schools for this admission cycle.
wxmanX said:
30 ACT, 31 Science ACT, and can't get into geoscience at A&M.
BS.
Joseph in Cypress said:
We applied end of October and found out this past weekend he was accepted PSA. We were surprised he did not get blinn team but excited there is a way for him to be an Aggie. He and about five of his friends will all be going to prairie view this next year. Not judging but for those whose kids were accepted psa why are you upset, why allow kids to go some place else instead of waiting a year to fulfill their dream? Just curious on the different points of views
500,000ags said:
Found some interesting stats after googling. This is all back of the envelope math from two different sources. So, in 2021, TAMU received 43.3k applications and admitted 27.3k (63%). But, that is really deceptive because of PSA, BT, etc. Looks like the last several years, full-admits are 9-11k freshmen with 2/3 being top 10%. And the other 1/3 have been around 3-4k freshman per year. TAMU's acceptance rate would be a minimum of ~30% just including top 10% admits. Full-admits that are outside the top 10% (that 3-4k) are really competing with 35k+ applicants for admission. Pretty rough if your goal is full-admit outside of top 10%.
500,000ags said:
Holy smokes - you are correct. I saw the amount offered PSA and assumed it was in the acceptance rate (since the rate is so high). The "accepted" pathways are gateway, BT, engineering specific thru BLINN and Galveston, and something called HECM. Man, when you consider PSA, ~80% of applicants had a route to TAMU in the graphic I used. That's so nuts.
Whoever runs tamu PR needs to publish the "acceptance" rate as true acceptances, not including acceptances into entry pathways500,000ags said:
Found some interesting stats after googling. This is all back of the envelope math from two different sources. So, in 2021, TAMU received 43.3k applications and admitted 27.3k (63%). But, that is really deceptive because of PSA, BT, etc. Looks like the last several years, full-admits are 9-11k freshmen with 2/3 being top 10%. And the other 1/3 have been around 3-4k freshman per year. TAMU's acceptance rate would be a minimum of ~30% just including top 10% admits. Full-admits that are outside the top 10% (that 3-4k) are really competing with 35k+ applicants for admission. Pretty rough if your goal is full-admit outside of top 10%.
NomadicAggie said:
This school is dead to me. Checking out and off the site for good.
Adios…