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Trump bump? Student numbers rise at US women鈥檚 colleges

Since the 2016 US presidential election, women鈥檚 colleges have been seeing significant gains as more young women embrace #MeToo

Published on
August 13, 2018
Last updated
August 13, 2018
Bryn Mawr College
Bryn Mawr College

For years, top women鈥檚 colleges have faced a challenge in that the overwhelming majority of high school girls have no interest in attending them. Student satisfaction surveys show that, once enrolled at these colleges, students love the experience. But many of them arrive聽despite聽a college being a women鈥檚 institution, not聽because聽of it.

That may be changing.

Some of the top women鈥檚 colleges are expecting record classes to enrol this month, as yield 鈥 the percentage of admitted applicants who accept admissions offers聽鈥 is up significantly.

It is relatively easy for well-known institutions to see gains in application numbers, which these institutions and other elite liberal arts colleges are experiencing as well. After all, applying doesn't require a commitment. In the era of the Common Application, applying to one more college is easy for an applicant.

Yield is another matter. It is about putting down a deposit and making a real choice. And the women鈥檚 colleges聽experiencing聽big gains in yield (gains of more than a percentage point or two in yield are big) were seeing application gains for years, but not yield gains.

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Last year鈥檚 decisions about where to enrol came after 2016 US presidential election, but much student planning and thinking about college choice that year preceded the Trump election and the #MeToo movement. That impact appears to be showing up this year.

To examine the impact, consider聽Bryn Mawr College. Its 3,166 applications this admissions cycle represents an 8聽percent increase聽from last year. But far more notable is the yield increase from 32 to 36聽percent.

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Officials at Bryn Mawr and elsewhere sense that young women are deciding that they want a women鈥檚 college, not just a liberal arts college that happens to be a women鈥檚 college, as was the case in the past.

鈥淭hese are great schools. People have always been interested in us because we are great schools,鈥 said Kim Cassidy, president at Bryn Mawr. 鈥淚 think, prior to 2016, many high school girls didn't look at us because they didn鈥檛 understand what it would mean to be at a women鈥檚 college.鈥 Recent events, she said, may be changing their view.

There has been聽a sharp increase in campus visits, she noted, which suggests more women are open to the idea of attending women鈥檚 colleges than was the case in the past.

Bryn Mawr is not alone in noting a change in attitudes.

Barnard College聽has聽had a 10聽percent increase in applications and a four-percentage-point increase in yield, from 51 to 55聽percent, since 2016.

Jennifer Fondiller, vice-president of enrolment at Barnard, said she is seeing more essays from applicants than in the past on issues of working on political campaigns and of joining protest movements or events, such as the Women鈥檚 March. A larger share of essays than in the past touch on issues of sexism or privilege, she added.

From the essays she reads and from talking to applicants, Fondiller said, she believes that those enrolling are 鈥渁cutely aware of what is happening in the world as current events have motivated them to fight for social justice and equality鈥hey are looking for colleges that will prepare them to enter these challenging spaces and navigate these conversations with confidence.鈥

Sonya Stephens, president of聽Mount Holyoke College, is seeing similar patterns.

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Applications for this admission cycle were up, from 3,446 to 3,611, a gain that Stephens said didn鈥檛 seem unusual, compared to other competitive liberal arts colleges. But the yield gain聽鈥 from 30聽percent to 34聽percent聽鈥 is 鈥渧ery striking.鈥

For the college it will mean a notably larger class of new students arriving later this month. Currently, the estimate is 636, up from 529 a year ago.

Stephens said that the college has a strong commitment to social justice. She and others there have spoken out about women鈥檚 rights, including the rights of transgender women, as well as about the rights of immigrants, minority students and other groups.

These values seem to be resonating with prospective students, Stephens said. When colleges survey students about why they enrolled, typically academic programmes, prestige, campus life and career goals top the list. Most other factors are well below.

When Mount Holyoke this year asked students who decided to enrol why they did so, 54聽percent said that awareness of social movements influenced their decision 鈥渜uite a bit鈥 or 鈥渧ery much鈥.

Audrey Smith, vice president of enrolment at聽Smith College, said that applications have been edging up there for a decade, so she doesn鈥檛 attribute all of this year鈥檚 success to the way young women are looking at the sexism and injustice in the world.

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Still, she said, the trends are favouring Smith and other women鈥檚 colleges.

Going back a few years, she compared the figures for the class that enrolled in the fall of 2015 to the class that will enrol this month. Applications are up, from 5,006 to 5,780, the聽admission聽rate is down from 38聽per cent to 31聽per cent and the yield is up, from 32聽per cent to 35聽per cent.

鈥淔ewer women are ruling out women鈥檚 colleges,鈥 she said. Smith has long had many of its applicants also apply to Mount Holyoke and聽Wellesley College. Now the college is receiving more cross-apps with Amherst College, Brown University and Wesleyan University. When women sought to apply to such colleges in the past, they typically ruled out women's colleges.

The trend is not unique to the Northeast, although that is where most of the nation's most prestigious women's colleges are located.

Agnes Scott College, in Georgia, hasn鈥檛 been tracking whether #MeToo is motivating more students to enrol. But yield is up this year聽鈥 from 25聽percent to 30聽percent. College officials credit curricular reforms, which have placed more of an emphasis on global and leadership skills. But this may relate to the broader environment for women as well, they said in a statement.

鈥淲e typically attract the type of students who are more globally aware of the world and their place in it or who are seeking to expand their understanding of others, and who often have a growing desire to effect positive change, whether that be in their local communities, society as a whole or particular groups of marginalised peoples,鈥澛爏aid the statement.

This fall鈥檚 first-year class is expected to be the largest in the college鈥檚 history.

Not all leaders of women鈥檚 colleges have embraced the #MeToo movement. At聽, which has struggled with enrolment of late, many students and alumnae were聽聽in May that appeared to place the blame for sexual harassment on its victims.

For those colleges that are explicitly talking about #MeToo and political leaders who are misogynistic, the current moment is prompting some to rethink how they position their institutions.

Cassidy, of Bryn Mawr, said that she sees her college and others being more explicit about the value of women鈥檚 colleges, while also trying to fight off misconceptions about them.

鈥淚 think we need to be really clear that the message is not about separating from society,鈥 but about 鈥渙wning who we are,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t's really important to talk about the value and the great education students are going to get,鈥 she said. For women, that means they are going to get an environment 鈥渨here women are the focus and the drivers of academic excellence, that these are places where women dominate all fields.鈥

Smith, of Smith College, says she sees much more confidence today in admissions officers drawing attention to the women鈥檚 college ethos.

鈥淚 used to feel it was necessary to put a bushel basket over the light of the wonderful attributes of a women鈥檚 college,鈥澛燬mith said. 鈥淚t would tell a student, 鈥榯rust me, when you are older, you will understand.鈥

鈥淣ow we鈥檝e let that message out into the light, and it鈥檚 at the front of the discussion.鈥

This is an edited version of a story .

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