LAFAYETTE — While first-time freshmen enrollment at University of Louisiana at Lafayette is down by 3.8 percent this fall, about 25 percent more recent high-school graduates enrolled at South Louisiana Community College.
The dip in UL’s first-time freshmen numbers is a sign of the university’s growing selectivity, said Steve Landry, ULL provost and vice president of academic affairs.
UL and other public, four-year universities in the state, fully implemented a selective admissions process in 2005, but universities have the discretion to admit a certain percentage of students who don’t meet the admission criteria.
The selective admissions policy was designed to funnel academically unprepared high-school graduates to community colleges for additional academic preparation.
It seems to be working.
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By MARSHA SILLS
Advocate Acadiana bureau