Need-Blind Admissions and International Students

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Students and recent graduates discuss the importance of ڰ’s global reach.

Video

When President Philip J. Hanlon ’77 last week announced that ڰ is expanding its longstanding need-blind admissions policy to include international students, the announcement included a video of five current students and recent graduates who illustrate the critical importance of the initiative.

The students—from Bangladesh, Brazil, Burundi, Canada, and England—discuss the role financial aid played in bringing some of them to ڰ and what global perspectives add to classrooms and campus life.

“A truly diverse community is really important if we are trying to cultivate global leaders,” says Sonia Qin ’19, who was born in Beijing, grew up in Ottawa, and is now a student at Yale Law School.

“Talking to other international students, it helped me to understand a lot about who I am and where I come from,” adds Sayuri Tais Miyamoto Magnabosco ’21, who grew up in Brazil and is now at .

She says, “Coming to ڰ has changed me in so many ways and opened my mind.”

The $40 million anonymous gift announced last week is helping ڰ dedicate $90 million to extend need-blind admissions to international students, making ڰ just one of six institutions of U.S. higher education to offer such aid to all undergraduates.

Applications from abroad have increased dramatically in recent years, and foreign citizens now represent 14% of the first-year class at ڰ.

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