My College Logic – CollegeLogic

COLLEGELOGIC- TAKING THE LOGICAL APPROACH, NOT THE TYPICAL APPROACH

The admissions process to the better, more desired colleges has become much harder in 2025.

As the 2025 college admissions year comes to an end, it is clear that admissions to the premier schools, both private and state universities, have become much harder over the past couple of years.

I doubt that anyone would argue that point with me, but their reasoning is usually based on a common misconception. People think that “lower acceptance rates” equate to a harder process. By itself, that’s wrong. 

To counter that reasoning, colleges have leveraged the COVID-originating “Test Optional” policy to drive a significant increase in the number of applicants. The policy attracts more applicants. Most top-tier colleges and universities have nearly doubled their applicant numbers since 2020.

USC, for example, went from 50,000 applicants and a 16% acceptance rate in 2020 to 85,000 applicants and an 8.5% acceptance rate in 2025. Mission accomplished! 

On a side note, 35,000 additional applications at $80 per application added $2,800,000 in application fees. 

For “test-optional” schools, this increase in applicants and decrease in acceptance rates are expected.  

It all adds to the colleges’ desired outcome, and it’s by their design. Why? It leads to a higher perception of prestige value, which in turn drives higher tuition rates and fewer scholarships. Tuition rises each year, and more families pay full price. This is why the “test optional” policy continues to exist. 

These three factors add to the perception that college admissions are harder now.

1) People mistakenly believe that academic credentials alone can prevail in winning acceptances. They bypass the most important credential: building a student profile that reflects the student’s credibility and substance.  

2) Most students can’t form a thoughtful, meaningful response to the basic, recurring questions asked in meetings with admission counselors and on applications, such as “What major do you want to study?” “How will you contribute to the student culture?” “What makes our college right for you?”

They are unable to establish a clear, meaningful purpose for their ambitions. 

3) People mistakenly believe that submitting more applications improves their odds. In reality, it lowers the likelihood of acceptance into their top priority colleges. A focus on submitting more applications diverts attention away from the follow-through required to win acceptances.

As a result, they disregard the importance of managing their applicant portals and related details. 

While these are definite reasons why thousands of students are denied admission, they are not the reasons why USC or other similar schools are harder to get into.

Instead, the primary reason the college process has become so much harder in 2025 is that there are twice as many serious-minded, credential-qualified students competing for the same number of open seats as there were five years ago. There aren’t enough openings to accept all the top students.

Credentials extend far beyond a GPA and SAT score. Top credentialed students focus on scheduling rigorous AP classes, mastering course content, preparing well for the SAT/ACT and AP exams, and scheduling essential activities during summer breaks.

They constantly build their profile to reflect credibility, substance, global awareness, and a meaningful purpose to their ambitions. 

When they arrive for college visits, they meet with the decision-makers to begin building relationships. They maintain communications with them throughout the process. 

Each year, the number of highly credentialed students competing for limited spots increases. Admission to the better colleges is harder for those students. Making it easy for less-qualified students to apply, thereby lowering the acceptance rate, doesn’t change a thing.

The pathway to earning admission to your preferred colleges is built by developing a profile for success that makes you truly qualified. That’s the College Logic way. If you’d like to discuss how your child can build their student profile, let’s talk.