CONVERSABLE ECONOMIST |
A Hive of Authentic College Applicants Posted: 18 Apr 2021 09:00 AM PDT As someone with a couple of college-age children who have navigated the admissions process at selective colleges, I found myself nodding in agreement with Matt Feeney's essay in the Chronicle of Higher Education, "The Abiding Scandal of College Admissions: The process has become an intrusive and morally presumptuous inquisition of an applicant's soul" (April 16, 2021). A basic fact is that applications at selective colleges are way up, and given a fixed number of slots of students, acceptance rates are way down. For example, the Washington Post just reported: "Columbia's applications were up a stunning 51 percent this year, and Harvard's were up 42 percent. There were also double-digit increases at Brown (27 percent), Dartmouth (33 percent), Princeton (15 percent), the University of Pennsylvania (33 percent) and Yale (33 percent)." Acceptance rates at places like Harvard, Stanford, and Princeton are in the range of 4-5%. When a school is accepting only one applicant of every 20, or every 10, or every five, you might think that the school would want to be clear with applicants about their low odds--before those applicants invest time, sweat, soul, and money in writing the essays and doing the paperwork. But of course, that's incorrect. Lots of applicants and a low acceptance rate may mean wasted time and enormous disappointment for applicants, but it looks good for the school. So instead, selective schools encourage everyone to apply: we were on tours at multiple selective schools that started with hundreds of people in auditoriums where such encouragement was given. We were repeatedly not to worry too much about test scores or high school grades--although even the most casual acquaintance with the facts about who is actually admitted suggests that these measures are pretty important. Instead, the emphasis was, as Feeney points out, on "holistic admissions" and "authentic" application that demonstrates the real specialness of you. On one side, saying that it's all about "authenticity" is an encouragement to apply. On the other side, if not accepted based on your authentic self, while others are accepted based on their authentic selves, it will seem pretty clear to an overwhelming majority of applicants that either your authentic self was either presented poorly or judged and found wanting. It's all too reminiscent of what Groucho Marx said about "sincerity," "If you can fake that, you've got it made." Moreover, it's clear at selective colleges that the applicant all need to show their special personal authenticity in some very specific ways: grades/test scores, involvement in extracurriculars and the community, ability and willingness to diagnose and write about their own selves, and so on. As Feeney points out, as college admissions have become more selective in recent decades, what the admissions people say they are looking at and emphasizing has changed, too. There was a stretch in the 1980s and 1990s where the emphasis was on extracurricular activities and the "well-rounded" applicant After this (quite predictably).after this resulted in an epidemic of extreme resume-padding, "more recently they have come to favor the passionate specialist, otherwise known as the `well-lopsided' applicant." Apparently on the horizon is an admissions online platform that will let you start storing your essays and videos starting in ninth grade. (Bad news here for applicants to selective colleges: Multiply the number of applicants by, say, a generously estimated one or two hours to look over every application. The admissions personnel on average don't have much more time than that. The idea that they are going to spend many hours looking over video and text of the best science reports, short stories, choir/band concerns, sports team highlights, and community service projects for every applicant is delusional. At best, they could skim and skip through a few entries for specific applicants.) Here's Feeney in the Chronicle of Higher Education:
I can easily understand some sensible reasons why colleges want their own admissions department. Sometimes there is a really good fit between the abilities and interests of student and the specific strengths of an institution. Pools of applicants will vary from year to year, and there's some logic in trying to make sure that you admit a class that has a degree of balance in terms of academic interests, nonacademic interests, and geographic and demographic characteristics. But with no deep disrespect meant to the admissions personnel at selective colleges and universities, who I think are mostly just doing the best they can, they aren't professors or therapists. So who died and made them the monarchs of defining what is the desirable kind of authenticity, and how a holistic view of that authenticity should be expressed? Especially the authenticity of 17 year-olds? |
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