UC Celebrates Its Most Academically Talented Freshman Class

The University of Cincinnati is celebrating its most academically prepared freshman class on the Uptown Campus, a result of admissions standards that are reflecting the success of UC’s growing retention and graduation rates as part of the UC|21 Strategic Plan.

Early Admissions figures indicate that freshmen entering UC’s baccalaureate colleges on the Uptown Campus hold an average ACT test score of 24.8, significantly higher than last year’s average of 24.1 and also higher than the national average ACT test score of 21.1. SAT test scores are up to 1125 this fall, compared with an average of 1109 last fall.  Among them are

  • 14 Cincinnatus $80,000 full-ride scholarship recipients
  • 897 Cincinnatus total scholarship recipients
  • 44 National Merit Scholars, a record for incoming freshmen
  • 29 recipients of UC’s Darwin T. Turner scholarship program
  • 30 Demakes Legacy Scholars
  • 67 valedictorians
  • 19 salutatorians

UC first put minimum admissions standards into place with the incoming 2006 freshman class as well as the requirement of a short essay on the students’ college application. The standards, developed from an analysis of student performance and retention, reflect a nationwide trend of raising admissions standards to build on success toward retention and graduation. Many of UC’s selective academic programs have higher admissions criteria. For 2008 freshmen to be admitted to a baccalaureate program on the Uptown Campus, they were required to have

  • A 2.6 high school GPA
  • An ACT test score of 21
  • A top 65 percent class rank (if there was no class ranking, such as home-schooled students, an ACT test score of 22 was required)

In addition, UC’s partnerships in building a K-16 pipeline to successful college graduation and successful careers is reflected in the growing number of graduates representing Cincinnati Public Schools (CPS), many of whom participated in the dual enrollment program. As CPS reports a district-wide graduation rate of 82 percent, a 31 percentage-point gain since 2000, UC is expecting more than 330 incoming freshmen who graduated from CPS, up from 268 last fall. Seventy-eight of the incoming freshmen graduated from Walnut Hills High School.

As UC|21 strategies also emphasize maintaining clear pathways for students seeking opportunity, UC has delegated a financial aid staff member to specifically work with students in Cincinnati Public Schools and to advise them about the financial aid process. UC provided 149 Cincinnati Pride Grants to 2008 graduates of Cincinnati Public Schools which, in combination with federal, state and institutional aid, provides full tuition and a book allowance for qualifying CPS grads, with priority given to students who demonstrate the greatest financial need for the grant. The grants are automatically renewed for up to four years, provided the student maintains federal guidelines for academic success, continues full-time enrollment for autumn, winter and spring quarters through graduation and remains in good standing with his or her academic program.

In preparation for next fall, Thomas Canepa, associate vice president for UC Admissions, says the crowds keep coming for campus tours amid UC’s successful marketing campaign and the word-of-mouth praise of UC’s high-quality programs and the transformation of campus. “We’ve had 6,500 students visit campus over the past year. We’ve seen an overwhelmingly positive response and I’m convinced that these visitors are telling their friends, ‘You have to see UC,’” Canepa says.

UC Convocation, the formal induction ceremony for incoming freshmen, will be held at 2 p.m., Sunday, Sept. 21, in Fifth Third Arena at Shoemaker Center.

 Back to School Information

UC Begins Classes on Sept. 24

UC’s Rising Retention and Graduation Rates the Result of a Success Challenge

UC Introduces Sophomore Learning Communities

UC Clermont Announces New College Success Program

Get Details on the Big Move Back to Campus

New Living and Learning Community for First-Generation College Students

A New COMMunity House for Communication Students

Geography Partnership One of Three New International Agreements to Be Implemented at UC in 2008-09

College of Business Introduces New Major in Entrepreneurship/Family Business

College of Business Welcomes First Kolodzik Business Scholars

A&S Introduces New Undergraduate Major in Neuroscience

UC Offers New Master’s Degree in Engineering

College of Engineering Introduces Minor in Sustainable Urban Engineering

Reading Project Connects More Than 1,000 UC Freshmen

UC Honors Students Begin Building A Home Designed for Special Needs

More Students and Pay for UC’s Growing Co-op Class

Campus Upgrades Underway as Part of the New Academic Year

Education on Crime Prevention Paying Off for Students

Updates on UC’s Emergency Text-Messaging Service

Parking Services Announces Changes for New Academic Year

At UC, Energy Savings Equals Economic Savings

Going Greener for Fall: UC’s Residential Restaurants Eliminate Food Trays

Solar House Serves as Summer Lab for Alternative-Energy Technologies

Bearcat Live! Presents Blessid Union of Souls

Princeton Review Places UC Among the Nation’s Best Universities

Related Stories

1

Beyond the classroom: perspectives on long-term study abroad

November 21, 2024

More than 1,300 UC students studied abroad in 2023-24. Most students tend to sway towards the most popular option of faculty-led programs, because of its shorter duration and high level of faculty support. But some UC students strike out on their own, choosing to fly solo for a semester to a year with long-term study abroad programs.

3

University of Cincinnati celebrates International Education Week

November 18, 2024

International Education Week, November 18-22, showcases study abroad around the globe. The annual event is sponsored in the United States by the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Department of Education. At the University of Cincinnati, a slate of student events will celebrate UC’s 4,616 international students, who make up 8.7% of this fall’s record enrollment.

Debug Query for this