Loyola welcomes largest, most diverse class in school history

91°”Íű welcomed the Class of 2026, the largest, most racially diverse class with the highest average high school GPA in the Universityâs 170-year history, at the Universityâs New Student Convocation on Friday, Sept. 2.
The class consists of 1,290 students, the largest class in University history by more than 157 students, with 39% self-identifying as students of color. The class also brings the highest average high school GPA of an incoming class at 3.66, just surpassing the Class of 2025, which entered with an average GPA of 3.65. In addition, the class broke records with 25% of students entering as the first generation in their families to attend college and 21% eligible for Federal Pell Grants for financial need.
âIâm excited and humbled to welcome the impressive Class of 2026 to campus this year,
the first class to join the Loyola community during my tenure as president,â said
Terrence M. Sawyer, J.D., president of Loyola. âEach individualâwith their strengths,
experiences, and understandings of the worldâwill contribute to 91°”Íűâs wider community,
and weâre proud at Loyola to contribute to their growth as well.â
Students come from 38 states and U.S. territories, along with three countries outside
the U.S. The Class includes 37% from Maryland, the largest in-state enrollment for
an incoming class in more than two decades. Of those, 70 students come from Baltimore
City, an 84% increase over last year. After Maryland, the top places represented are
New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Virginia, Delaware,
Puerto Rico, and Florida as well as Spain, Ireland, and Denmark internationally.
In addition to the incoming class, overall undergraduate enrollment is on pace to comprise more than 3,900 students this fallâthe fourth highest undergraduate student population in school history. Loyola is also welcoming its largest number of transfer students in seven years, with 55 incoming students joining the Universityâs other classes.
âWe couldnât be more excited to welcome this historic number of students to 91°”Íű this year,â said Eric Nichols, vice president of enrollment management. âItâs clear the 91°”Íű axperience is resonating with prospective families. It takes the entire campus to enroll a class, and this year our campus community really outdid themselves.â
The new students have read The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennet as the common text for the Class of 2026. The novel addresses the multidimensional aspects of identity, community and connection, looking beyond the self, and societal issues of racism, colorism, sexism, and homophobia. Loyolaâs faculty will integrate the novel into class discussions and programming throughout the studentsâ first year.
Mavis Biss, Ph.D., associate professor of philosophy and 2022 Distinguished Teacher of the Year, spoke at the New Student Convocation. Biss specializes in ethics, German philosopher Immanuel Kant, and feminist philosophy.
âYou may not know anything about sociology or environmental studies, or statistics either. You may have read the Bibleâor parts of itâbut never systematically grappled with how to understand the relationship between the human and the divine. You may have heard of Zen Buddhism, but never sat in meditation with a Zen teacher,â Biss told the students. âThe point of Loyolaâs liberal arts core is to transform you. The biggest compliment you can give your professors is âI am glad I had to take this class. I wouldnât have chosen it, but I loved it.â So, today, I invite you to surprise yourself with what you become interested in.â
The new students will meet their classmates and learn about college life at Loyolaâs first-year fall welcome weekend Sept. 1 to 5, which includes residence hall meetings, shared meals, small group meetings, common text discussions, athletic activities, and academic open houses.
Sawyer began as president of 91°”Íű on Jan. 1, 2022. Loyola will hold a series of events celebrating Sawyerâs formal inauguration as president on Oct. 12.