DClinPsy Clinical Psychology


4.8%

offer rate

1 in 20 applicants to this programme received an offer.

Data shown above is for entry in academic year 2018/19 (sources).



Previous Years


Why are there more offers than interviews?
Some programmes, for example many undergraduate programmes at UCL, interview only a small number of applicants, while giving out most offers without interview.

Why are there inexact numbers?
For data protection reasons, when the number of applications, offers, or admissions is low for a given course (or in some cases, regardless of the numbers), some universities report only approximate numbers. Based on these, we have computed the range of possible values.

Data sources
  • FOI Request by Albert Warren.
  • FOI Request by Mr Burano. September 2015.
  • FOI Request by John Kay. February 2019.
Legend

The acceptance rate, or offer rate, represents the fraction of applicants who received an offer. Note that this will be generally lower the acceptances rates (acceptances divided by applicants) published by many other sources. This article explains it in more detail.
The acceptances generally indicate the number of offer holders who accepted the offer and fulfilled its conditions. For some universities, however, it denotes the number of applicants who accepted the offer, regardless of whether they subsequently met its conditions.

Data Reliability

Unless otherwise noted, the data presented comes from the universities and is generally reliable. However, some of the differences between years and/or courses may be due to different counting methodologies or data gathering errors. This may especially be the case if there is a sharp difference from year to year. If the data does not look right, click the "Report" button located near the top of the page.