Admissions data from New College of Florida shows that new leadership installed as part of Gov. Ron DeSantis’s conservative makeover of the institution has succeeded in drawing a record number of incoming students this fall, a boom largely driven by student-athlete recruitment.

The increased enrollment also came with a decrease in overall grade point average and test scores, markers that historically had helped the school earn a national reputation as a top public liberal arts college.

Overall, average ACT and SAT scores for the incoming fall class at New College are lower than last year. The overall GPA is also lower, according to data obtained by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, part of the USA TODAY Network, and confirmed by the college.

Much of the drop can be attributed to incoming student-athletes who, despite scoring worse on average, have earned a disproportionate number of the school’s $10,000-per-year merit-based scholarships.

Establishing an athletic program from scratch within months has been a foundation of Interim New College President Richard Corcoran’s plan to grow enrollment in the incoming class – the first class under his guidance and a cornerstone in the DeSantis-directed transformation of the school into a more conservative, classical liberal arts college in the mold of the Christian Hillsdale College in Michigan.

Corcoran was named interim president by the college’s overhauled Board of Trustees in February. He held a meeting on March 31 with admissions staff to push for record enrollment for the fall session. Thirty minutes after the meeting, the college announced the creation of an athletic department.

Some New College admissions staff members privately expressed discomfort with the tactics used to surpass Corcoran’s goal of a record class of 300 or more students. Three staff members, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they fear for their jobs and safety if they publicly criticize leadership, said brochures have mischaracterized the school, recruiting staff has played up the college’s athletic assets, and that offers of inducements, such as laptops, were inappropriate.