TENAFLY TIGERS CLASS OF 2010

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TENAFLY TIGERS CLASS OF 2010 A REPORT TO THE BOARD OF EDUCATION POST SECONDARY ADMISSIONS AND TRENDS Jayne Bembridge Director of Guidance June, 2010

Table of Contents Issues and Trends for the College Admissions Process 2010 College Admission Year-End Trends... 3 Rejected! Colleges Rejects Who Made it Big.. 6 THS Top 20 Most Popular Colleges Where Our Students Applied.. 9 Top 10 Majors 2010. 10 Highest Total Cost for Colleges 2009-2010. 10 Colleges Represented at THS College Mini Fair 2009-2010 11 Outcome Summary 2009-2002.. 12 College Planning Presentations 2009-2010 13 Class of 2010 College Acceptances & Attending Summary Data Report. 14 Class of 2010 Matriculation Report by Category 19 Class of 2009 College Acceptances & Attending Summary Data Report. 21 Class of 2009 Matriculation Report by Category 25 Class of 2008 College Attending Report. 27 Class of 2008 Matriculation Report by Category.. 29 2

College Admission Year-End Trends College Bound Issues & Trends for the Colleges Admissions Advisor More than 1.5 million students are planning to enroll in the 4,000 plus U.S. colleges and universities this fall. According to some reports, at least 20 percent of them sent off seven or more applications, chiefly to the most competitive schools, even though application fees can reach $50. According to an April 22 Washington Post story, the nation s most selective colleges received 31 percent of all applications, but will enroll only 18 percent of all freshmen. In fact, between 2002 and 2006, the average public and private four-year college or university received 24 percent more applications. In part, that results from mass marketing on the part of colleges and the ease of electronic submissions through vehicles such as the Common Application. Multiple applications also mean multiple choices for many qualified students. But the ease of applications may be about to meet the difficult reality of paying for college, especially while the economy is still experiencing hard times. A sense of uncertainty about the entire process still prevails. 2010 may be viewed as having the largest pool of students and the most competitive admissions season ever Berkeley. The U. of California, Berkeley, attracted a record 50,375 applications for the class of 2014, and accepted 12,915 of them. Because of state funding cuts, fewer California applicants were admitted this year compared to last year, 9,420 for 2010-11 versus 11,200 for 2009-10. The campus hopes to enroll 4,100 students for fall 2010, and an additional 950 next spring. About 200 students were placed on Berkeley s wait list. Brown. Brown U. in Providence, Rhode Island, admitted a little over 9 percent of its 30,136 applications, or 2,804 students to its class of 2014. Last year, it admitted 11 percent, but applications for this fall shot up by about 21 percent, according to a statement issued by James Miller, dean of admission. Admitted students from California, Massachusetts and Illinois led the parade, and 53 percent of them were women. Brown also admitted international students from 81 nations. About twothirds of the students will receive financial aid. Chicago. The U. of Chicago attracted 19,370 applications this year, 42 percent more than last year. That drove down its acceptance rate from 27 percent last year to 18 percent or 3,560 students for the class of 2014. Cornell. Cornell U., in Ithaca, New York, received 36,337 applicants and accepted 18 percent, down from 19 percent a year ago. The Ivy League school admitted 33 percent 11 years ago. Dartmouth. Applications to Dartmouth C. in Hanover, New Hampshire, rose by 3.5 percent this year to a record high 18,778. It accepted 2,165 or 11.5 percent of applicants, a drop from 12.5 percent accepted last year. In December, the Ivy League college accepted 461 of 1,600 applicants through its early decision process. Dartmouth put 1,740 students on its wait list. Nearly 40 percent of accepted students were valedictorians and almost 12 percent were salutatorians. Our applicant pool has grown by nearly 80 percent over the last decade making the process of selecting students for Dartmouth much more complex. 3

Duke. This year Duke, in Durham, North Carolina, (this year s NCAA basketball champ) received 26,770 applications for the class of 2014 and accepted 3,372. This year s acceptance rate of 14.8 percent made for the most selective class in the school s history. Early Decision accounted for 602 of the students, and led to 150 fewer regular admits. Duke wait listed an astonishing 3,382 applicants G.W. George Washington U. in Washington D.C. received 21,135 applications, a 6 percent increase over last year. It accepted 6,655 or 31.5 percent of the students, down from 36.5 last year. GW expects to field a first-year class of 2,350 students. Harvard. Only 2,110 of the 30,489 applicants to Harvard will be welcomed to the class of 2014. That translated into a record low 6.9 percent acceptance rate, down from 7 percent last year. The 30,000 applications was an increase of 5 percent this year over last. Johns Hopkins. Johns Hopkins U. attracted 18,455 applications, an increase of 14 percent over last year, and the eighth straight record year. It admitted 20.4 percent of these, down from 26.7 percent last year. MIT. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, also in Cambridge, accepted 1,611 or 9.7 percent of its 16,632 applicants for its 2014 class. In 2003, MIT s acceptance rate was 16.4 percent. Early admissions applications for this year increased 13 percent to 5,684, while 590 were admitted early action. MIT boosted its wait list by more than half to 722. Last year, MIT admitted 80 from its wait list. Northwestern. Northwestern U. in Evanston, Illinois, admitted 23 percent of its applicants, down by 4 percent from last year, from a pool that grew by 9 percent. Penn. The U. of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia admitted 3,830 students or 14.2 percent of its 26,938 applicants, down from 17.1 percent last year. Penn expects to enroll 2,420 new students in the fall. Princeton. Princeton U. attracted 26,247 applications, up by nearly 20 percent. It accepted 2,148 students for an 8.18 admit rate, down from 9.79 last year. Stanford. Stanford U. in Palo Alto, California, accepted 2,300 students, including the 753 admitted in December through its early action program, from its record high 32,022 applications for the class of 2014. That was a record low 7.2 percent, making it the second most selective program in the nation, edging out Yale. About 20 transfer students will be admitted, while 998 are on the wait list. Tufts. It was also tough to get into Tufts this year. The Massachusetts school fielded 15,437 applications, the school s third largest pool, and admitted 24.5 percent of them. About 32 percent of those accepted are students of color. About 91 percent were in the top 10 percent of their high schools. Tulane. Administrators at Tulane U. estimate it received more applications than any other private university in the nation, outranking sister schools Vanderbilt, Duke and Emory. In fact, 43,834 students applied to Tulane. U. Cal. When all was said and done, The U. of California received 82,056 California applications, and nearly 71.6 percent of applicants were offered admission to at least one of its nine campuses. 4

Vanderbilt. Vanderbilt in Tennessee attracted 21,817 applications for 1,600 spots in the class of 2014, an increase of 13 percent over last year. Its admit rate slid from 18.9 percent in 2009 to 16.3 percent. Villanova. This year, 14,367 students applied to Villanova U. in Pennsylvania, and 5,998 of them were offered a place in the class of 2014. That translates into a 41 percent admissions rate, down 5.3 percent from last year. Virginia. The U. of Virginia fielded 22,516 applications for the class of 2014 and 7,964 of those were in-state applicants. Offers of admission were extended to 6,907 students, 600 more than last year. The acceptance rate for in-state students was 42.4 percent, for out-of-state students just 24 percent. Wash U. Washington U. in St. Louis drew nearly 25,000 applicants this year, a record, and admitted about 20 percent, the same as last year. It expects to enroll about 1,500 first-year students in the fall. Yale. Yale U. in New Haven, Connecticut, accepted 1,940 students from an applicant pool of 25,869, 134 fewer than last year. Because it admitted fewer students, its 7.5 percent acceptance rate remained the same as last year. It wait-listed 932 students, 21 percent more than last year. 5

The Wall Street Journal. April 28, 2010 Rejected! Colleges Rejects Who Made it Big Few events arouse more teenage angst than the springtime arrival of college rejection letters. With next fall's college freshman class expected to approach a record 2.9 million students, hundreds of thousands of applicants will soon be receiving the dreaded letters. Famous college rejects Teenagers who face rejection will join good company, including Nobel laureates, billionaire philanthropists, university presidents, constitutional scholars, best-selling authors and other leaders of business, media and the arts who once received college or graduate-school rejection letters of their own. Both Warren Buffett and "Today" show host Meredith Vieira say that while being rejected by the school of their dreams was devastating, it launched them on a path to meeting life-changing mentors. Harold Varmus, the winner of the Nobel Prize in medicine in 1989, says getting rejected twice by Harvard Medical School, where a dean advised him to enlist in the military, was soon forgotten as he plunged into his studies at Columbia 's med school. For other college rejects, from Sun Microsystems co-founder Scott McNealy and entrepreneur Ted Turner to broadcast journalist Tom Brokaw, the turndowns were minor footnotes but ones they still remember and will talk about. Rejections aren't uncommon. Harvard accepts only a little more than 7% of the 29,000 undergraduate applications it receives each year, and Stanford 's acceptance rate is about the same. Buffett: 'Turned out for the better' "The truth is, everything that has happened in my life... that I thought was a crushing event at the time has turned out for the better," Buffett says. With the exception of health problems, he says, setbacks teach "lessons that carry you along. You learn that a temporary defeat is not a permanent one. In the end, it can be an opportunity." Buffett regards his rejection at age 19 by Harvard Business School as a pivotal episode in his life. Looking back, he says, Harvard wouldn't have been a good fit. But at the time, he "had this feeling of dread" after being rejected in an admissions interview in Chicago and a fear of disappointing his father. As it turned out, his father responded with "only this unconditional love... an unconditional belief in me," Buffett says. Exploring other options, he realized that two investing experts he admired, Benjamin Graham and David Dodd, were teaching at Columbia's graduate business school. He dashed off a late application, where by a stroke of luck it was fielded and accepted by Dodd. From these mentors, Buffett says, he learned core principles that guided his investing. The Harvard rejection also benefited his alma mater: His family gave more than $12 million to Columbia in 2008 through the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, based on tax filings. The lesson of negatives becoming positives has proved true repeatedly, Buffett says. He was terrified of public speaking -- so much so that when he was young he sometimes threw up before giving an address. So he enrolled in a Dale Carnegie public-speaking course and says the skills he learned there enabled him to woo his future wife, Susan Thompson, a "champion debater," he says. "I even 6

proposed to my wife during the course," he says. "If I had been only a mediocre speaker I might not have taken it." Bollinger: 'I need to work extra hard' Columbia President Lee Bollinger was rejected as a teenager when he applied to Harvard. He says the experience cemented his belief that it was up to him alone to define his talents and potential. His family had moved to rural Oregon, where educational opportunities were sparse. As a kid, he did menial jobs around a newspaper office, such as sweeping the floor. Bollinger recalls thinking at the time: "I need to work extra hard and teach myself a lot of things that I need to know," to measure up to other students who were "going to prep schools and having assignments that I'm not." When the Harvard rejection letter arrived, Bollinger accepted a scholarship to the of Oregon and later graduated from Columbia Law School. His advice: Don't let rejections control your life. To "allow other people's assessment of you to determine your own self-assessment is a very big mistake," says Bollinger, a First Amendment author and scholar. "The question really is, who at the end of the day is going to make the determination about what your talents are and what your interests are? That has to be you." Others who received Harvard rejections include Vieira, who was turned down in 1971 as a high school senior. At the time, she was crushed. "In fact, I was so devastated that when I went to Tufts ( in nearby Medford, Mass.) my freshman year, every Saturday I'd hitchhike to Harvard," she says in an e-mail. But Vieira went on to meet a mentor at Tufts who sparked her interest in journalism by offering her an internship. Had she not been rejected, she doubts that she would have entered the field. Brokaw, also rejected as a teenager by Harvard, says it was one of a series of setbacks that eventually led him to settle down, stop partying and commit to finishing college and working in broadcast journalism. "The initial stumble was critical in getting me launched," he says. Finding a place where you're welcome Varmus, the president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, was daunted by the first of his two turndowns by Harvard's med school. He enrolled instead in grad studies in literature at Harvard but was uninspired by thoughts of a career in that field. After a year, he applied again to Harvard's med school and was rejected, by a dean who chastised him in an interview for being "inconstant and immature" and advised him to enlist in the military. Officials at Columbia's medical school, however, seemed to value his "competence in two cultures," science and literature, he says. If rejected by the school you love, Varmus advises in an e-mail, immerse yourself in life at a college that welcomes you. "The differences between colleges that seem so important before you get there will seem a lot less important once you arrive at one that offered you a place." Similarly, John Schlifske, the president of insurance company Northwestern Mutual, was discouraged as a teenager when he received a rejection letter from Yale. An aspiring college football player, "I wanted to go to Yale so badly," he says. He recalls coming home from school the day the letter arrived. "Mom was all excited and gave it to me," he says. His heart fell when he saw "the classic thin envelope," he says. "It was crushing." Yet he believes he had a deeper, richer experience at Carleton College in Minnesota. He says he received a "phenomenal" education and became a starter on the football team rather than a bench warmer, as he might have been at Yale. "Being wanted is a good thing," he says. 7

He had a chance to pass on that wisdom to his son Dan, who was rejected in 2006 by one of his top choices, Duke. Drawing on his own experience, the elder Schlifske told his son, "Just because somebody says no doesn't mean there's not another school out there you're going to enjoy and where you are going to get a good education." Dan ended up at his other top choice, Washington in St. Louis, where he is a senior. McNealy showed 'em Rejected once, and then again, by business schools at Stanford and Harvard, McNealy practiced the perseverance that would characterize his career. A brash economics graduate of Harvard, he was annoyed that "they wouldn't take a chance on me right out of college," he says. He kept trying, taking a job as a plant foreman for a manufacturer and working his way up in sales. "By my third year out of school, it was clear I was going to be a successful executive. I blew the doors off my numbers," McNealy says. Granted admission to Stanford's business school, he met future Sun Microsystems co-founder Vinod Khosla and went on to head Sun for 22 years. Paul Purcell, who heads Robert W. Baird, one of the few investment-advisory companies to emerge unscathed from the recession, says he interpreted his rejection years ago by Stanford as evidence that he had to work harder. "I took it as a signal that, 'Look, the world is really competitive, and I'll just try harder next time,'" he says. He graduated from the of Notre Dame and got an MBA from the of Chicago, and in 2009, as the chairman, president and chief executive of Baird, won the of Chicago Booth School of Business distinguished corporate alumnus award. Baird has remained profitable through the recession and expanded client assets to $75 billion. Time puts rejection letters in perspective, Turner says. He received dual rejections as a teenager, from Princeton and Harvard. The future America's Cup winner attended Brown, where he became captain of the sailing team. He left college after his father cut off financial support and joined his father's billboard company, which he built into the media empire that spawned CNN. Brown has since awarded him a bachelor's degree. Tragedies later had a greater impact on his life, Turner says, including the loss of his father to suicide and his teenage sister to illness. "A rejection letter doesn't even come close to losing loved ones in your family. That is the hard stuff to survive," Turner says. "I want to be sure to make this point: I did everything I did without a college degree." While it is better to have a degree, Turner says, "you can be successful without it." 8

Top 20 Most Popular Colleges Where our Students Applied 1. Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at New Brunswick 2. Pennsylvania State, Park 3. of Michigan 4. New York 5. Boston 6. Syracuse 7. Northeastern 8. of Maryland, College Park 9. Columbia 10. The George Washington 11. Carnegie Mellon 12. Lehigh 13. Boston College 14. Cornell 15. Binghamton 16. of Miami 17. of Massachusetts 18. Northwestern 19. Indiana at Bloomington 20. of Wisconsin, Madison 9

Top 10 Majors 2010 Princeton Review 1. Business Administration and Management 2. Psychology 3. Nursing 4. Biology/Biological Science 5. Education 6. English Language and Literature 7. Economics 8. Communication Speech/Speech Communication and Rhetoric 9. Political Science and Government 10. Computer and Information Sciences Highest Total Cost for Colleges 2009-2010 *Cost includes tuition, room and board (34 colleges now charge $50,000 +) College Total Cost 1. Sarah Lawrence College $54,410 2. New York $51,991 3. George Washington $51,730 4. Bates College $51,300 5. Skidmore College $51,196 6. Johns Hopkins $51,190 7. Georgetown $51,122 8. Connecticut College $51,115 9. Harvey Mudd College $51,037 10. Vassar College $50,875 11. Wesleyan $50,862 12. Claremont McKenna College $50,800 13. Colgate $50,660 14. Carnegie Mellon $50,640 15. Haverford College $50,625 10

Colleges Represented at Tenafly High School 2009-2010 College Mini-Fairs Adelphi Agnes Scott College Albany College of Pharmacy Albright college Arizona State Art Institute of NY City Assumption College Bard College Barnard College Baruch College of the CUNY Bates College Binghamton Bloomfield College Bloomfield of PA Boston Brandeis Bryant Bucknell Byrn Athyn College Caldwell College California Institute of the Arts Carnegie Mellon Castleton State College Champlain College Christopher Newport City of New York Columbia Concordia College Connecticut College Cooper Union Culinary Institute of America Curry College Dartmouth College Delaware Valley college Dowling College Drew Duke East Stroudsburg of Pennsylvania Eastwick College Eckerd College Elon Emmanuel College Emory Fairleigh Dickinson Felician College Five Towns College Fordham Franklin and Marshall College George Mason George Washington Georgetown Guilford College Hartwick College Harvard High Point Hofstra Illinois Wesleyan Iona College James Madison Johnson & Wales Johnson State College Kean King s College La Salle Lafayette College Lehigh Lesley Long Island Manhattan College Manhattanville College Marist College Massachusetts College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences McGill Mercy College Michigan State Mitchell College Monmouth Montclair State Mount Ida College Muhlenberg College New Jersey City New Jersey Institute of Technology New York Northeastern Northwestern Norwich Nyack College Ohio State Pace, New York City Post Princeton Quinnipiac Ramapo College of New Jersey Richard Stockton College of NJ Rider Rochester Institute of Technology Roger Williams Rowan Rutgers Sacred Heart Saint Peter's College Salve Regina Southern Methodist St. Francis College St. John's St. Thomas Aquinas College Stonehill College Stony Brook SUNY Colleges Swarthmore College Temple Tufts Tulane Union College of Alabama of Albany at Buffalo of Bridgeport of Chicago of Connecticut of Hartford of Illinois of Maine at Augusta 11

of Maryland of Massachusetts of Miami of Michigan of New Haven of Pennsylvania of Puget Sound of Rhode Island of Richmond of Scranton of Texas of Vermont United States Army United States Marine Corps United States Navy Vanderbilt Washington Wells College + Wentworth Institute of Tech. Wesleyan Western New England College Wheaton College Widener William Paterson TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL OUTCOME SUMMARY 2002-2010 4-Year College Percentage 2-Year College Percentage Other Percentage Class of 2010 91 4 5 Class of 2009 88 6 6 Class of 2008 92 4 4 Class of 2007 90 7 3 Class of 2006 95 3 2 Class of 2005 94 1 5 Class of 2004 91 5 4 Class of 2003 88 4 8 Class of 2002 87 6 7 12

College Planning Presentations 2009-2010 College Essay Writing Workshop: Tuesday, Oct. 20 th, 2009 after school in the College Career Counseling Center College Application Boot Camp: Week of October 5-9 during lunch College Career Counseling Center Post High School Planning Night for Juniors and Their Parents: Thursday, October 29, 2009 at 7:30 pm in Auditorium Naviance Parent Workshop: Tuesday, November 10th at 7:30 pm in Library Senior Financial Aid Night: Thursday, December 8 th Senior Financial Aid Night at 7:30 pm in Library Student Athlete Information Night: Tuesday, April 13 th at 7:00 pm in the College & Career Counseling Center (Room 103) Spring Naviance Parent Workshop: Thursday, April 15 th, 2010 at 7:30 pm in Library Media Center Inside The College Admissions Process: Thursday, May 6 th, 2010 at 7:30 pm in the Library Media Center THS College Visits: Every Tuesday September through November o College Mini Fairs are held every Tuesday in the Library Media Center from 11am-1:30 pm (lunch periods) during the fall. The full list of visiting colleges is listed on Naviance Family Connection. Students receive email alerts reminding them about upcoming visits. Passes are available to those students who have class during this time. 13

Tenafly High School- Class of 2010 Application Summary Data Report (2010) Acceptances and attending Accept Attend College Academy of Art Adelphi Albany College of Pharmacy Albert A. List College of Jewish Studies 2 0 Albright College Allegheny College 10 3 American American of Paris Amherst College 2 0 Arizona State 6 1 The of Arizona The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale The of the Arts Asbury College Assumption College Averett 2 1 Babson College 4 1 Bard College Barnard College Barry 2 0 Baruch College of the CUNY Bates College Beloit College 2 0 Bentley 12 10 Bergen Community College Berkeley College - Newark Campus Berklee College of Music 20 2 Binghamton Bloomfield College 3 0 Bloomsburg of Pennsylvania 7 3 Boston College Boston Conservatory 22 4 Boston Bowdoin College 12 2 Brandeis of Bridgeport Bridgewater State College 2 0 Brooklyn College of the CUNY Brown Accept Attend College Bryant Bryn Athyn College of the New Church Bryn Mawr College Bucknell 3 1 Buffalo State College of SUNY of California at Berkeley of California at San Diego of California at Santa Barbara of California at Santa Cruz Campbell Canisius College 9 5 Carnegie Mellon Case Western Reserve The Catholic of America 2 0 Centenary College of Central Florida 2 1 Champlain College Chapman 3 0 College of Charleston of Chicago Christopher Newport City College of New York 3 1 City of New York Clark College Clark Clarkson Clemson Colby College 4 1 Colgate 6 0 of Colorado at Boulder Colorado State 4 3 Columbia Connecticut College 9 2 of Connecticut Cooper Union 4 2 Cornell 14

Accept Attend College 3 0 Curry College 3 2 Dartmouth College Davidson College Delaware State 1 of Delaware Denison 2 0 of Denver DePaul DeSales Dickinson College Dowling College 4 0 Drew 15 2 Drexel 3 2 Duke Eastern Eckerd College Elmhurst College Elmira College Elon 4 3 Emerson College Emmanuel College 4 1 Emory Endicott College Essex County College Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts 2 0 Fairfield 6 0 Fairleigh Dickinson Fairleigh Dickinson, Madison 4 2 Fashion Institute of Technology Felician College Five Towns College 3 1 Florida Atlantic Florida International 3 1 Florida State of Florida 9 4 Fordham 3 1 Franklin and Marshall College 12 8 The George Washington 2 1 Georgetown 2 2 Georgia Institute of Technology Georgia State Gettysburg College Gordon College Goucher College Greensboro College Greenville College Grinnell College Accept Attend College Hamilton College - NY Hamline Hampshire College 8 0 of Hartford 2 0 Hartwick College Harvard Haverford College Hobart and William Smith Colleges 13 2 Hofstra College of the Holy Cross Hood College Howard 2 0 Hunter College of the CUNY of Illinois at Chicago 12 2 of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign Illinois State 21 3 Indiana at Bloomington Iona College The of Iowa 13 2 Ithaca College James Madison 2 1 Johns Hopkins Johnson & Wales 3 2 Johnson & Wales The Juilliard School Kean Kent State King's College La Salle Laboratory Institute of Merchandising 5 1 Lafayette College Laguna College of Art & Design 2 0 Lasell College 4 3 Lehigh Lehman College of the CUNY Lewis & Clark College 3 1 Long Island, Brooklyn Campus 4 2 Long Island, C.W. Post Campus Loyola Marymount 2 1 Loyola Chicago 6 1 Loyola Maryland Loyola New Orleans 5 1 Lynn Macaulay Honors College at CUNY 3 1 Manhattan College 15

Accept Attend College 2 0 Manhattanville College Marist College Maryland Institute College of Art of Maryland, College of Maryland, Baltimore County 28 5 of Maryland, College Park Marymount Manhattan College Marymount Massachusetts College of Art and Design 2 0 Massachusetts College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences Massachusetts Institute of Technology 19 1 of Massachusetts, Amherst 2 0 of Massachusetts, Boston McDaniel College McGill Mercyhurst College Miami International of Art & Design 2 0 Miami, Oxford 1 of Miami Michigan State 24 6 of Michigan Middlebury College of Minnesota, Twin Cities 2 0 Mitchell College 3 1 Monmouth 11 3 Montclair State Mount Holyoke College 6 2 Muhlenberg College of Nevada, Las Vegas New England College New England Conservatory of Music 3 1 of New Haven 4 0 New Jersey Institute of Technology 7 2 The College of New Jersey College of New Rochelle New York City College of Technology New York Institute of Technology - Manhattan New York Institute of Technology - Old Westbury 22 13 New York Accept Attend College The of North Carolina at Chapel Hill North Carolina State of North Florida 23 4 Northeastern 2 1 Northwestern of Notre Dame Nova Southeastern 3 2 Oberlin College Occidental College 5 0 The Ohio State Ohio 2 0 Ohio Wesleyan of Oregon Oxford College of Emory 8 2 Pace, New York City 7 2 Pace, Pleasantville- Briarcliff of the Pacific 4 2 Parsons School of Design, New School 4 0 Pennsylvania State, Hazleton 41 9 Pennsylvania State, Park 2 1 of Pennsylvania Pepperdine Philadelphia of Pittsburgh at Bradford 1 of Pittsburgh Pitzer College Plattsburgh State Plymouth State Point Park Polytechnic Institute of NYU Pomona College 3 2 Pratt Institute Princeton 5 0 Providence College 2 0 Purchase College 6 0 Purdue 12 0 Quinnipiac 5 2 Ramapo College of New Jersey Raphael Recanati International School Reed College 2 0 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rhode Island School of Design 12 0 of Rhode Island 16

Accept Attend College 2 2 Rice Richard Stockton College of New Jersey The American International in London (Richmond) 3 2 of Richmond 6 2 Rider 2 2 Ringling College of Art and Design Roanoke College 3 0 Rochester Institute of Technology 5 2 of Rochester 6 1 Roger Williams Rollins College Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology 3 0 Rowan Rutgers, Camden 57 13 Rutgers, New Brunswick 3 1 Rutgers, Newark 4 0 Sacred Heart Saint Peter's College Salve Regina of San Diego Sarah Lawrence College Savannah College of Art and Design Savannah College of Art and Design-Atlanta School of the Art Institute of Chicago School of the Museum of Fine Arts 6 1 School of Visual Arts of the Sciences in Philadelphia 4 0 The of Scranton Seattle 3 1 Seton Hall 4 2 Skidmore College Smith College of South Carolina 2 0 of South Florida, Tampa Southeastern of Southern California Springfield College of St. Andrews (Scotland) St. John's - Staten Island Campus Accept Attend College 8 1 St. John's - Queens Campus St. Thomas Aquinas College Stanford 3 1 State of New York at Albany 2 0 State of New York at New Paltz College of Staten Island Stevens Institute of Technology Stonehill College 8 0 Stony Brook 6 2 Suffolk SUNY College at Brockport 2 0 SUNY College at Cortland SUNY College at Oneonta SUNY College at Potsdam SUNY at Farmingdale Susquehanna Sussex County Community College Swarthmore College 24 7 Syracuse 12 3 The of Tampa 3 1 Temple Texas A&M The of Texas, Austin Touro College Towson Trinity College 3 2 Tufts 17 4 Tulane Union College 2 1 at Buffalo The State of New York 2 0 Ursinus College Valley Forge Christian College 3 1 Vanderbilt 3 2 Vassar College 5 0 of Vermont 6 3 Villanova Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State of Virginia Wake Forest Washington in St. Louis of Washington Wellesley College Wentworth Institute of 2 0 Technology 17

Accept Attend College 3 3 Wesleyan West Chester of Pennsylvania Wheaton College 2 0 Wheaton College 2 0 Widener College of William and Mary 9 5 William Paterson of New Jersey Williams College Wingate 18 5 of Wisconsin, Madison Worcester Polytechnic Institute Yale York College of the CUNY 18

Matriculation Report 2010 (By Category) Categories defined by Barrons College Guide Most Competitive (86) 1 Barnard College 3 Boston College 2 Brandeis 5 Carnegie Mellon 1 Colgate 3 Columbia 1 Cooper Union 2 Cornell 2 Dartmouth College 2 Duke 1 Emory 1 Franklin & Marshall College 1 Georgetown 1 Haverford College 1 Johns Hopkins 1 Lafayette College 3 Lehigh 13 New York 1 Northwestern 2 Oberlin College 1 Princeton 2 Rice 1 Swarthmore College 2 The College of New Jersey 8 The George Washington 2 Tufts 4 Tulane 1 of Miami 1 of Notre Dame 1 of Pennsylvania 2 of Richmond 2 of Rochester 1 Vanderbilt 2 Vassar College 3 Villanova 1 Washington in St. Louis 1 Wellesley College 3 Wesleyan 1 Yale Highly Competitive (75) 3 American 1 Babson College 1 Bard College 2 Binghamton 4 Boston 1 Clark 3 Emerson College 4 Fordham 2 Georgia Institute of Technology 1 Loyola Chicago 1 Loyola Maryland 2 Muhlenberg College 4 Northeastern 2 Ramapo College of New Jersey 13 Rutgers, New Brunswick 2 Skidmore College 1 Stevens Institute of Technology 7 Syracuse 2 of Connecticut 2 of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 5 of Maryland, College Park 6 of Michigan 5 of Wisconsin, Madison 1 Wheaton College 19

Very Competitive (28) 2 Drexel 1 Florida State 2 Hofstra 1 Hood College 3 Indiana at Bloomington 2 Ithaca College 1 Manhattan College 1 Marist College 9 Pennsylvania State, Park 1 Rutgers, Newark 1 Seattle 1 Seton Hall 1 The of Arizona 1 at Buffalo The State of New York 1 of the Sciences in Philadelphia Other (10) 10 Bergen Community Competitive (41) 1 Assumption College 1 Averett 1 Buffalo State College of SUNY 1 Champlain College 1 City of New York 1 Eastern 2 Fashion Institute of Technology 1 Florida Atlantic 2 Johnson & Wales 1 Long Island, Brooklyn 2 Long Island, C.W. Post 1 Lynn 1 Mercyhurst College 1 Monmouth 3 Montclair State 1 Oxford College of Emory 2 Pace 2 Rider 1 Roger Williams 1 St. John s - Queens 1 State of New York at Albany 2 Suffolk 1 Temple 3 The of Tampa 1 of Massachusetts, Amherst 1 of New Haven 5 William Paterson Specialty (10) 1 Laboratory Institute of Merchandising 2 Parson school of Design, New School 2 Pratt Institute 2 Ringling College of Art and Design 1 Savannah College of Art and Design-Atlanta 1 School of Visual Arts 1 The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale 20

Tenafly High School Class of 2009 Application Summary Data Report (2009) Acceptances & Attending Accept Attend College Academy of Art 5 2 Adelphi Albright College 12 3 American Amherst College Arcadia 5 0 Arizona State 2 1 Bard College 4 2 Barnard College Baruch College of the CUNY 3 0 Bates College Bennington College 2 0 Bentley Bergen Community College 11 Berklee College of Music 21 4 Binghamton Bloomfield College 4 0 Bloomsburg of Pennsylvania Borough of Manhattan Community College of the CUNY 7 1 Boston College 18 2 Boston Bowdoin College 3 0 Brandeis Brooklyn College of the CUNY 2 0 2 2 Brown 2 2 Bryant 2 1 Bryn Mawr College Bucknell 3 0 Buffalo State College of SUNY California College of the Arts California Institute of the Arts Carleton College Carnegie Mellon 7 3 Champlain College Chapman 3 1 Clark 2 1 Clemson 2 0 Colgate 2 0 College of Charleston College of Mount Saint Vincent Colorado State 7 7 Columbia Concordia College Connecticut College 2 2 Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science & Art 3 0 Cornell 2 0 Curry College 4 3 Dartmouth College DePaul 3 1 Dickinson College Dominican College of Blauvelt 4 0 3 1 Drew 9 1 Drexel Duke 2 0 East Stroudsburg of Pennsylvania East Tennessee State Eastern 2 0 Eckerd College Edinboro of Pennsylvania 5 2 Emory 6 2 Fairleigh Dickinson Fairleigh Dickinson, Madison Fashion Institute of Technology 3 2 Florida Atlantic 2 1 Florida State 1 Fordham Franklin and Marshall College 5 4 2 0 Franklin Pierce Furman George Mason 3 2 Georgetown Georgia State Goucher College Guilford College 21

Hamilton College - NY 2 2 Harvard High Point 9 1 Hofstra Hunter College of the 5 4 CUNY Indiana at Bloomington 18 2 5 0 Iona College 12 3 Ithaca College 7 0 James Madison 4 1 John Jay College of Criminal Justice of the CUNY 2 0 Johns Hopkins Johnson & Wales 4 4 4 0 Kean Kent State 2 0 Kenyon College Kutztown of 3 0 Pennsylvania La Salle Laboratory Institute of Merchandising 6 1 Lafayette College 7 2 Lehigh 2 0 Lesley Lincoln Technical Institute 6 3 Long Island, C.W. Post Campus Louisiana State 3 0 Loyola College in Maryland Loyola Marymount Lycoming College Lynchburg College Lynn 2 1 Manhattan College Manhattan School of Music 3 0 2 1 Manhattanville College 2 0 Mannes College of Music 3 0 Marist College Maryland Institute College of Art Marymount Manhattan College McDaniel College 5 1 McGill Mercy College Miami International of Art & Design 4 0 Miami, Oxford 4 1 Michigan State Middlebury College Monmouth College 4 0 Monmouth 17 5 Montclair State Moravian College Mount Holyoke College Mount Saint Mary College 4 1 Muhlenberg College 2 0 New England Conservatory of Music New Jersey City New Jersey Institute of Technology 15 10 New York North Carolina State 12 1 Northeastern 4 1 Northwestern Norwich Nyack College 2 2 Oberlin College 2 0 Oberlin Conservatory of Music Ohio 7 2 Pace, New York City Pace, 8 2 Pleasantville-Briarcliff Parkland College 4 2 3 1 18 4 Parsons School of Design, New School Pennsylvania State, Altoona Pennsylvania State, Berks College Pennsylvania State, Harrisburg Pennsylvania State, Hazleton Pennsylvania State, Schuylkill Pennsylvania State, Park Pennsylvania State, Wilkes-Barre Pennsylvania State, Worthington Scranton Philadelphia Biblical 22

2 0 Philadelphia 2 2 Pima Community College Pomona College Post 6 0 Pratt Institute Princeton 3 0 Purchase College 3 0 Purdue 10 1 Quinnipiac 8 2 Ramapo College of New Jersey Reed College 7 1 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rhode Island College 2 1 Rhode Island School of Design Rice Richard Stockton College of New Jersey 7 0 Rider Ringling College of Art and Design 3 0 Roger Williams Rollins College 8 1 Rowan 2 0 66 19 Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at Camden Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at New Brunswick Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at Newark 3 2 Sacred Heart Saint Michael's College Saint Peter's College Salve Regina Santa Monica College School of the Art Institute of Chicago 2 0 5 1 School of Visual Arts 7 0 Seton Hall 2 1 Skidmore College Smith College 7 0 3 0 6 0 Southern Methodist St. John's - Queens Campus St. Thomas Aquinas College State of New York at Albany 7 2 State of New York at New Paltz 5 1 Stevens Institute of Technology Stony Brook Southampton 15 3 Stony Brook 3 0 Suffolk SUNY at Farmingdale SUNY College at Cortland SUNY College at 2 1 Geneseo SUNY College at Old Westbury 2 0 SUNY College at Oneonta SUNY Oswego 8 1 Syracuse 6 2 Temple The Catholic of America 9 0 The College of New Jersey The Curtis Institute of Music 10 7 The George Washington The Juilliard School The Peabody Institute of The Johns Hopkins 18 7 The of Arizona The of Iowa 3 0 The of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The of Scranton 2 1 17 4 The of Tampa 3 0 Towson 4 1 Tufts 7 0 Tulane 2 0 Union College at Buffalo School of Dental Medicine 4 2 at Buffalo The State of New York 2 0 of Bridgeport of Central Florida 3 1 of Chicago 4 1 of Colorado at Boulder of Colorado at Colorado Springs of Colorado at 23

Denver 1 of Connecticut of Dayton 18 2 of Delaware of Denver 8 1 of Hartford 4 0 of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 18 7 of Maryland, College Park 22 3 of Massachusetts, Amherst 13 2 of Miami 16 5 of Michigan 2 0 of Nevada, Las Vegas 2 0 of New Hampshire of New Haven of North Carolina at Greensboro of North Carolina at Wilmington of North Carolina School of the Arts 2 1 of Pennsylvania 11 4 of Pittsburgh 15 1 of Rhode Island of Richmond 8 1 of Rochester of South Carolina 2 0 of South Florida of Southern California of the Sciences in Philadelphia of the Virgin Islands-St. Thomas 12 0 of Vermont 3 2 of Virginia 6 0 of Wisconsin, Madison 2 0 Ursinus College Valley Forge Christian College Vanderbilt Vassar College 3 1 Villanova 3 0 Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Washington and Lee Washtenaw Community College Wentworth Institute of Technology Wesleyan 4 0 West Chester of Pennsylvania 4 0 West Virginia Westminster Choir College of Rider Widener 9 0 William Paterson of New Jersey Williams College Worcester Polytechnic Institute 3 2 Yale 24

Matriculation Report 2009 (By Category) Categories defined by Barrons College Guide Most Competitive (73) Highly Competitive (62) 2 Barnard College 3 American 1 Boston College 1 Bard College 2 Brown 4 Binghamton 1 Bryn Mawr College 2 Boston 1 Carleton College 1 Clark 3 Carnegie Mellon 1 Clemson 7 Columbia 1 Dickinson college 2 Cooper Union 1 Muhlenberg College 3 Dartmouth College 1 Northeastern 2 Emory 1 Quinnipiac 4 Franklin and Marshall College 2 Ramapo College of New Jersey 2 Georgetown 1 Rollins College 2 Harvard 19 Rutgers (New Brunswick) 1 Lafayette College 1 Skidmore College 2 Lehigh 1 Southern Methodist 1 Middlebury College 1 Stevens Institute of Technology 10 New York 3 Stony Brook 1 Northwester 1 SUNY (Geneseo) 2 Oberlin College 1 Syracuse 1 Pomona College 7 of Maryland 1 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 5 of Michigan 7 The George Washington 4 of Pittsburg 1 Tufts 1 of Chicago 2 of Miami 1 of Pennsylvania 1 of Richmond 1 of Rochester 2 of Virginia 1 Vassar College 1 Villanova 1 Wesleyan 1 Williams College 2 Yale 25

Very Competitive (38) Competitive (49) 2 Bryant 2 Adelphi 1 DePaul 1 Chapman 1 Drew 1 East Tennessee State 1 Drexel 1 Eastern 1 Florida State 2 Fairleigh Dickinson 1 Georgia State 2 Fashion Institute of Technology 1 Hofstra 4 Hunter College of the CUNY 2 Indiana 1 John Jay College of the CUNY 3 Ithaca College 4 Johnson & Wales 1 McGill 3 Long Island (C. W. Post) 1 Manhattan College 5 Montclair State 1 Michigan State 1 Moravian College 4 Pennsylvania State (Univ. Park) 1 Ohio 1 Rowan 2 Pace (New York) 2 Rutgers (Newark) 2 Pace (Pleasantville-Briarcliff) 2 SUNY (New Paltz) 1 Pennsylvania State (Harrisburg) 1 The Catholic of America 1 Pennsylvania State (Hazleton) 7 The of Arizona 1 Pennsylvania State (Schuylkill) 1 The of Scranton 1 Philadelphia Biblical 2 SUNY (Buffalo) 2 Temple 2 of Delaware 4 The of Tampa 1 of Colorado (Boulder) 1 of Hartford 3 of Massachusetts (Amherst) 1 of New Haven 1 of Rhode Island Specialty (11) Other (18) 1 Academy of Art 11 Bergen Community College 1 Berklee College of Music 1 Manhattan Community College of the CUNY 1 California Institute of the Arts 1 Parkland College 1 Miami International of Art & Design 2 Pima College 2 Parsons School of Design, New School 1 Santa Monica College 1 Rhode Island School of Design 1 of the Virgin Islands (St. Thomas) 1 School of Visual Arts 1 Washtenaw Community College 1 The Curtis Institute of Music 1 The Juilliard School The Peabody Institute of The Johns Hopkins 1 26

COLLEGE ATTENDING CLASS OF 2008 (Number Attending in Parentheses: Student Reported) American (1) Johns Hopkins (1) The of Arizona (2) The Juilliard School (2) Barnard College (1) Keene State College (1) Baruch College of the CUNY(2) Lehigh (2) Bergen Community College (8) Louisiana State (1) Binghamton (4) Loyola College in Maryland (2) Bloomsburg of Pennsylvania (1) Manhattan College (2) Boston College (1) Manhattan School of Music (1) Boston (2) Marist College (2) Brandeis (4) of Maryland, College Park (2) Brown (1) Marymount Manhattan College (2) Bryn Mawr College (1) of Massachusetts, Amherst (5) Buffalo State College of SUNY (1) McGill (1) Carnegie Mellon (2) of Michigan (4) Champlain College (1) Mitchell College (1) of Chicago (1) Montclair State (7) Colgate (1) College of Mount Saint Vincent (1) of Colorado at Boulder (4) Muhlenberg College (5) Columbia (3) The College of New Jersey (1) Concordia (1) New York (6) Connecticut College (1) The of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1) Cornell (7) Northeastern (3) Dartmouth College (1) Northwestern (2) Deep Springs College (1) Oberlin College (1) Delaware Valley College (1) Okefenokee Technical College (1) of Delaware (1) of Oregon (1) Dominican College of Blauvelt (1) Oxford College of Emory (1) Drexel (1) Pace, New York City (1) Duke (2) Pennsylvania State, Park (4) Eckerd College (1) Point Park (1) Emory (2) Purchase College (1) Fairleigh Dickinson (1) Quinnipiac (2) Fashion Institute of Technology (2) Ramapo College of New Jersey (1) Felician College (1) Raphael Recanati International School (2) Five Towns College (1) Regis College (1) of Florida (1) Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (2) Fordham (3) Rhode Island School of Design (3) Full Sail Real World Education (1) of Rhode Island (2) The George Washington (9) Rice (1) Grinnell College (1) Rider (3) Hampshire College (1) of Rochester (1) Harvard (1) Rowan (1) Hofstra (2) Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at Camden (1) College of the Holy Cross (1) Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at New Brunswick (26) of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1) Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at Newark (1) Indiana at Bloomington (5) Sarah Lawrence College (1) Ithaca College (4) Savannah College of Art and Design (1) James Madison (1) School of Visual Arts (1) 27

Soka of America (1) Vanderbilt (1) of Southern California (1) Vassar College (1) St. John's (4) of Vermont (1) St. Thomas Aquinas College (2) Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State (1) Stevens Institute of Technology (3) of Virginia (1) Stony Brook (3) Washington in St. Louis (2) SUNY College of Technology at Canton (1) of Washington (1) Syracuse (8) West Chester of Pennsylvania (2) Temple (3) Western New England College (1) Towson (1) Whitman College (1) Trinity College (3) William Paterson of New Jersey (1) Tufts (3) Yale (2) Tulane (1) 28

MATRICULATION REPORT 2008 Most Difficult (49) More than 75% of the freshmen were in the top 10% of their high school class and scored over 1310 on the SAT I (verbal and mathematical combined) or over 29 on t he ACT (composite); about 30% or fewer of the applicants we re accepted. 1 Barnard College 4 Brandeis 1 Brown 1 Bryn Mawr College 2 Carnegie Mellon 1 Colgate U niversit y 3 Columbia 7 Cornell 1 Dartmouth College 2 Duke U niversity 2 Emory 1 Harvard 1 Johns Hopkins 1 Lehigh 1 Louisiana State 6 N ew York 2 Northwestern Universit y 3 Rhode Island Schoo l of Design 1 Rice 2 The Julliard School 1 of Chicago 1 of Southern California 2 Washington in St. Louis 2 Yale Very Difficult (114) More than 50% of the freshmen were in the top 10% of their high school class and sco red over 1230 on the SAT I or over 26 on the ACT; about 60% or fewer applicants were accepted. 1 American 2 Baruch Colle ge of t he CUNY 1 Bost on College 2 Bost on 1 College of the Holy Cross 1 Connecticut College 3 Fordham 1 Grinnell College 1 James Madison 2 Manhattan College 1 Manhattan School of Music 2 Marist College 1 McGill 5 Muhlenberg College 3 Northeastern 1 Oberlin College 1 Oxford College of Emory 4 Pennsylvania State, Park 2 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at New 27 Brunswick 1 Rutgers, The State of New Jersey at Newark 1 Sarah Lawrence College 1 School of Visual Arts 3 Stevens Institut e of Technology 3 Stony Brook Universit y 4 SUNY Binghamton 8 Syracuse 1 The College of New Jersey 9 The George Washington 1 The of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 3 Trinity College 3 Tuf ts 2 Tulane 1 of Florida 4 of Michigan 2 of Rhode Island 1 of Rochester 1 of Virginia 1 Vanderbilt 1 Vassar College 1 Whitm an College 29

MATRICULATION REPORT 2008 (Page 2) Moderately Difficult (83) 1 Bloomsburg of Pennsylvania 1 Buffalo State College of SUNY 1 Champlain College 1 College of Mount Saint Vincent 1 Concordia Universit y 1 Deep Springs College 1 Delaware Valley College 1 Drexel 1 Eckerd College 1 Fairleigh Dickinson 2 Fashion Institute of Technology 1 Felician College 1 Five Towns College 1 Hampshire College 2 Hofstra 5 Indiana at Bloomington 4 Ithaca College 1 Keene Stat e College 2 Loyola College in Maryland 2 Marymount Manhattan College 7 Mont clair State Univers it y 1 Pace, New York City 1 Point Park 1 Purchase College 2 Quinnipiac 1 Ramapo College of New Jersey 3 Rider 1 Rowan 1 Savannah College of Art and Design 1 Soka of America 4 St. John's 2 St. Thomas Aquinas College 3 Temple 1 Towson 2 The of Arizona 4 of Colorado at Boulder 1 of Delaware 1 of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 2 of Maryland, College Park 5 of Massachusetts, Amherst 1 of Oregon 1 of Vermont 1 of Washington 1 Virginia Polytechnic Ins titute and State Univers ity 2 West Chester of Pennsylvania 1 Western New England College 1 William Paterson of New Jersey Minimally Difficult (2) Most freshmen were not in the top half of their high sc hool class and scored somewhat below 1010 on the SAT I or below 19 on the ACT; up to 95% of the applicants were accepted. 1 Dominican College of Blauvelt 1 Mitchell College Noncompetitive (0) Virtually all applicants were accepted regardless of high school rank or test scores. Not Rated (14) 8 Bergen Community College 1 Full Sail Real World Education 1 Okefenokee Technical College 2 Raphael Recanati International School 1 Regis College 1 SUNY College of Technology at Canton 30