Admissions Terms
Applications
College Type
Degrees
Misc.
100

A college where, based on the average GPA and test scores of accepted students, you have a high likelihood of being admitted.

Safety School

100

Sometimes referred to as a college application essay, these essays give admissions officers insights into your character, personality and motivation.

Personal Statement

100

Offer specialized training in a particular industry or career. Possible programs of study include culinary arts, firefighting, dental hygiene and medical-records technology. Usually offer certificates or associate degrees.

Vocational-Technical and Career College

100

Academic degree awarded by community colleges, junior colleges, technical colleges.

Associate Degree

100

A student who enrolls in a college after having attended another college.

Transfer Student

200

The percentage of applicants a college accepts for admission.

Acceptance Rate

200

Standardized application forms accepted by many colleges.

Common Application

200

An independent school that sets its own policies and goals, and is privately funded. Relies mainly on tuition, fees, and private sources of funding. Private donations can sometimes provide generous financial aid packages for students.

Private University

200

An academic degree earned for an undergraduate course of study that nominally requires four years of full time study.

Bachelor Degree

200

A policy of accepting any high school graduate, no matter what his or her grades are, until all spaces in the incoming class are filled. Almost all two-year community colleges have this policy.

Open Admissions

300

A student’s option to defer an offer of admission for up to two years.

Deferred Admissions

300

Items you include with your college application to provide more information about your talents, experiences and goals.

Supplemental Materials

300

College offers a broad base of courses in the liberal arts and sciences; such as, literature, history, languages, mathematics, physical sciences, and life sciences.

Liberal Arts College

300

A college or university student who has not yet received a bachelor's or similar degree.

Undergraduate Student

300

Hour-long, content-based college admission tests that allow you to showcase achievement in specific subject areas: English, history, math, science and languages. Some colleges use to place students into the appropriate courses as well as in admission decisions.

SAT Subject Test

400

The percentage of students who return to a college for their sophomore year. An indicator of student satisfaction.

Retention Rate

400

Tests designed to measure students’ skills and help colleges evaluate how ready students are for college-level work. Examples are the ACT and the College Board’s SAT.

Admissions Test

400

Business offering variety of degree programs, usually preparing student to a specific career. Have a number of constituents outside of students and faculty; namely shareholders.

For-Profit College

400

The highest level of academic degree. Qualifies the holder to teach at the university level in the specific field of his or her degree, or to work in a specific profession.

Doctorate Degree

400

An admission policy of considering each application as soon as all required information (such as high school records and test scores) has been received, rather than setting an application deadline and reviewing applications in a batch.

Rolling Admissions

500

Submitting your college application before the regular deadline. Get admission decisions from colleges earlier than usual. Plans are not binding, which means that you do not have to enroll in a college if you are accepted.

Early Action

500

The percentage of accepted students who go on to enroll at that college.

Yield

500

Institution offering a learning environment designed first and foremost to serve students' interests. They spend the money you give them on educating you. It is led by a staff under the direction of a Board of Trustees.

Non-Profit College

500

The first level of graduate study. Usually must already hold an undergraduate degree (a bachelor's degree). It typically requires a year and one-half to two years of full-time study.

Master's Degree

500

An agreement between two-year and four-year colleges that makes it easier to transfer credits between them. It spells out which courses count for degree credit and the grades you need to earn to get credit.

Articulation Agreement