• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

Comments & Discussion

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There are 33 comments on Record Number of Applicants to Class of 2016

    1. Being realistic, as long as you don’t have a 2.5 GPA or something, you probably can. I’m a member of the class of 2015 and you’d be surprised…if they all met the benchmarks the administration claims they did for our class (really high GPA, etc.) then I’m a monkey’s uncle. Just remember, all college acceptance processes are holistic. As long as you’re well-balanced, you’ll probably make the cut.

      1. If you have a 2.5 in highschool expect that the number you leave with from BU will be even lower and employment impossible unless you spend your first two years in CGS catching up.

      2. I’m a junior in highschool. Have about a 3.5 GPA. Do a ton of Sports and Extra Curricular activities, but only got an 1800 on my SAT. Do I still have a chance of making it into BU’s school of Communications, specifically looking towards public relations?

  1. “The audience may have chuckled, but the joke was antiquated. Provost Jean Morrison says that since 2003, when 71 percent of applicants for the freshman class were accepted, admission to the University has grown more selective: the percentage for the Class of 2015 dropped to 49.

    “We’d like to get that down” further, Morrison says. Selectivity breeds quality, according to the provost, because “the harder a place is to get into, the more desirable it is” to quality applicants.”

    This really makes me worried. There’s bad reasoning going on here. A university shouldn’t work to make itself merely desirable. It should work to be at the forefront of research and teaching. And the percentages going down don’t mean much. It could just be an artifact of more low quality applicants. Selectivity is necessary but not sufficient.

      1. Furthermore, Barlow writes that “nonacademic amenities” are what other schools utilize to entice students, but Boston University does the exact same. Student Village 2? Not a highlight of the campus?

    1. Boomerang,
      I agree with your reasoning, but BU already has those things. Generally BU lags only behind MIT in research in many of its schools and has been ranked to have some of the best professors in the country in its professional schools (SMG, LAW, COM ect.). What BU does not have is a high selectivity ranking and for that is suffers greatly in the rankings (but who really cares after they get admitted anyway?) What they do need to improve, however, is the quality of CAS as a whole.

  2. We sure don’t seem to have problems pulling in students…..So does that mean the administrative staff will see some nice salary increases this year?? HAHA I kid myself!

  3. I loved my time at BU, graduating in 1970. I enjoy coming back to school often and take great pride in how the school has grown and transformed itself into what it is today. To all who are responsible, keep up the good work!

  4. It’s pretty sad that BU needs to accept over 20,000+ to fill 4,500 spots. The administration needs to be spending more time recruiting better teachers, cutting CGS, and expanding its academics instead of building skyscraper dorms (with monthly rent reaching $1,500 I might add) and fancy dining halls if the university actually wants a competitive freshmen class. The fact remains that the majority of the high caliber of ‘accepted students’ comes from the 15,000 that applied to BU as a safety school and chose to go elsewhere.

  5. As a first year graduate student here, I can see why many would choose not to come. There’s simply better schools, far nicer campuses, etc. It was my back up school, and I have a feeling it was many others’ as well. I intend to move on after my second year.

  6. YAY to the Class of 2016!!

    —–

    Cutting CGS isn’t a solution to just toss around. A few of the best professors are AT CGS and the program’s academic goals should not be overlooked. I chose BU BECUASE of CGS. If CGS didn’t exist, I probably wouldn’t have even applied to BU. The stigma of CGS students not being competitive concerns me.

    1. CGS does an amazing job of taking not so great students and significantly improving them. This is by far a commendable academic goal for BU (not to mention the high revenue CGS brings in). BU, however, suffers in the rankings for its much lower selectivity ratings. It is up to you to decide which you think is more important for a university.

  7. Well the campus is already incredibly crowded. They better get crackin’ on making larger and more decent women’s locker rooms at the gym to accommodate all the new students!

  8. Regarding building programs at BU: Recruiting better teachers and expanding academics are done by different staff than the ones that supervise building projects. Given the increased large alumni donations in the last few years, I believe the buildings are paying for themselves as well as serving as a recruitment tool. – – – – You hit the nail on the head with the safety school numbers. BU Marketing may have changed the perception of BU as a safety school, but the reality of 75% of accepted students choosing other schools pretty much proves BU was not the first choice and often not the second choice for most student applicants.

  9. As a graduate of BU in the 1950’s, I am very proud of the many recent accomplishments at the university and count myself as a loyal alumnus. I don’t think, however, that knocking “the old BU” – so fashionable in the previous administration- is helpful. We were groups of first-generation, mostly commuting and working students. Many of us went on to graduate schools and served as ministers, social workers, educators, and small business operators. For us, BU was the only option – and a good one!

  10. As a proud Alum and Western Ma Bay Stater I am thrilled that the pulse
    of my University is growing stronger and stronger.
    My education enabled me opportunities I never imagined !
    Keep up the extraordinary effort; don’t compromise integrity……

  11. It’s great to read this article, but it would be nice to hear that BU is not only working to improve recruitment, but also that it’s working harder to give its students a great education. I wish BU would take this same strategy of using surveys and reaching out to students with its currents students rather than just its perspective students.

    1. BU offers surveys to its students not only in their senior year as mentioned above, but following every course for every professor at the end of each semester. In addition to that, Dean Elmore frequently asks for input from the student body about ways to enhance academic and residential life on campus – they DOS Office is very responsive to student requests (for example, changing the hours that the BU Bus runs for campus safety reasons – this was actually a request made by students).

      Additionally, while it’s disappointing to admit, rankings DO matter and continued prestige at BU will allow them to draw in top faculty from around the world as well (not just students!) to provide a unique and superior quality of education. it’s extremely difficult to tackle so many agendas at once and I give BU a lot of credit for stepping it up within the past few years. My mother was an SON’88 graduate and was originally pretty disappointed that I was interested in BU – now her attitude has changed entirely after seeing the improvements and administrative changes that have taken place on campus. My education at BU contributed largely to my pursuit of graduate studies, and I am confident that I was admitted to a nationally top ranked program because of the well-rounded undergraduate education I received at BU.

  12. My father went to BU in the early 50s on the GI bill. The education he recieved helped pull a young man born during the depression out of poverty, and onto a very succesful business career.My son is now a sudent at BU. I know that my father was very proud of BU degree and a think my son is getting a fine education.
    Like life, ones college experience will be what you make of it.

  13. BU was my first choice. I am always disappointed that BU doesn’t rank higher in the US News ranking. Whether or not they should, people take those rankings very seriously and it matters. Other evaluate your education based on those numbers – particularly in other regions of the country. I have heard that BU doesn’t participate in the rankings but maybe they should.

  14. This is jaw-dropping. I have a Master’s degree from BU, and this is having never set foot on the campus (it was via the overseas program in Germany). The quality of academics was nothing short of superb, and I can say without a shadow of a doubt that my BU experience changed my life. How much? I work at an agency that specializes in, oh, shall we say, international relations, and when I select interns, anyone with a degree or earning a degree from BU automatically goes to the top of the pile.

  15. All I know is that BU can definitely hold its own academically. My daughter, a freshman, has friends who go to both Harvard & UPenn, and they were surprised how difficult some of her intro courses were compared to theirs in the same subjects. I am confident that BU will give my daughter a world-class, high quality, well-rounded education!

  16. To be honest, recent demographic shifts have changed to make it seem as if you can’t get anywhere without a college degree. Sure there are examples like Bill Gates, but overall more and more high schoolers in America are aiming for college. It’s probably a main reason why the quantity and quality of students have been rising.

  17. I graduated from BU (’73 in nursing). I moved back to the mid west a year later. I was the only BSN graduate in a moderate size hospital at that time. I quickly became a supervisor, and then on to graduate school here in Dayton (Suma cum laude). I retired a few years ago as a professor of nursing. I want to also state that I graduated from a one room school in rural north central Wi. BU gave me the opportunity of a lifetime to excel at something that was dear to my heart-serving and caring for the sick. I did not have the highest SAT, but during my interview their was not a dry eye around the large conference as they listened to my story of what it meant to me to come to BU. It changed my whole life in ways most people could not comprehend. BU didn’t change me for a few years, but for a lifetime. The ripple effects are immeasurable over my 45 years as a nurse educator. There are some things that just can’t be measured or put a number on. The BU educators around that large conference table made an excellent choice when they admitted a young country girl full of dreams. I promised them I would not let them down and I don’t think I did. I made the Deans list and graduated with honors. I am proud of BU and would put BU high on the list of outstanding universities. I pray our young tech generation does not lose the heart in its education process.

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