|
Calvin College
has an official 2000-2001 enrollment of 4,314 students the school announced
today. That number includes full-time, part-time and graduate students.
That is Calvin's
highest enrollment since 1989 and the fourth-highest enrollment in school
history. This year's final number is up 41 students from last year and
marks the eighth straight year that Calvin's total enrollment has risen.
A first-year class
of 1,053 students propelled the rise in total enrollment.
Tom McWhertor,
Calvin's vice president for enrollment and external relations, noted
that both the first-year class and the final enrollment number could
have been even higher. "This year, for the first time in many years,"
said McWhertor, "Calvin turned away a number of students who wanted
to be members of the entering class. We had students on a 'wait-list'
at the end of the summer since their enrollment would have boosted our
overall enrollment above the targets established by our Board (of Trustees)
in our current strategic plan."
McWhertor said
several factors are responsible for Calvin's solid enrollment. "Our
Admissions and Financial Aid staff are to be commended," he said. "But
all of their work would be for naught without the good things happening
here that draw students -- from our top-notch faculty to new majors
to new state-of-the-art buildings to support scholarship and research.
We're committed to offering a first-class, Christian education at Calvin."
Calvin's class
of 2004 is 56.6% female, 52.5% Michiganian and 47.0% Christian Reformed.
In addition 56% are top scholarship recipients and 36% are children
of Calvin alumni. Canadian citizens make up 5% of the first-year class,
while international citizens make up another 3.4%. And 6.5% of the U.S.
students in the first-year class are students of color.
Overall, this year's
student body is 55.8% female, 54.3% Michiganian, 51.4% Christian Reformed,
4.7% Canadian and 3.5% international citizenship. In addition 5.6% are
students of color.
|