By Daniel Goldstein
1. Not all grades are created equal
For the more
than two million high school seniors who intend to go to college next
year, the stomach-churning slog of filling out applications is in full
swing.
And whether they'll
get a thick package announcing their admission or a thin, dream-dashing
one-page letter (or their online equivalent) may well depend on their
grade-point average. Grades account for about 75% of the typical admissions decision, according to the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC).
But
not all good grades are created equal. In the eyes of the admissions
officers at the nation's more than 2,800 four-year colleges, an "A"
earned at one high school may only be worth a "B" at a more rigorous
one. And in recent years, colleges have given more weight to grades from
designated college-prep courses — and the more exclusive the college,
the more weight those grades get.
One reason colleges are getting choosier: Grade inflation. Research by the College Board,
the organization that administers the SAT, shows that the average GPA
for high school seniors rose from 2.64 in 1996 to 2.90 in 2006 — even
as SAT scores remained essentially flat.
The
researchers saw this as evidence that some teachers were "using
grades... to reward good efforts rather than achievement." (The
College Board also noted that, based on their test scores, less than
half of SAT takers — just 43% in the graduating class of 2013—were
academically prepared for college work.)
All
that said, admissions officers generally believe that if you have a
good GPA in high school, you'll probably have a good GPA in college.
"The
clear message (is that) hard work and good grades in high school
matter, and they matter a lot," said William Hiss, a retired dean of
admissions at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine who co-wrote a February
2014 study on standardized testing.
2. We don't trust your essay
Many
colleges rely on a student's application essay to create a fuller
picture of the applicant. But in an era of helicopter parenting,
colleges increasingly worry that these essays aren't written by the
student.
To combat the possibility that parents, siblings or
school counselors may be ghostwriting essays, many colleges require an
additional piece of school writing that has been graded by a teacher.
"If the application essay looks like it was written by Maya Angelou
and the school work looks like Willy Loman's, it will raise some
eyebrows," Hiss said.
At some schools, application essays have
also been caught up in the debate over whether a student's race,
ethnicity or gender should be a factor in the college's admissions
decision. At some public universities where race and gender preferences
are banned, admissions officers are encouraged to give less weight to
the essay because it can give away clues about the race and gender of
the applicant.
3. We're having second thoughts about the SAT
For
decades, the SAT has been considered the primary benchmark for
students' ability to handle college-level work. This year, more than 7
million students will take entrance exams like the SAT or ACT this year
for college admission.
But at more schools, skepticism about the
test is affecting admissions policy: About 800 out of the country's
2,800 four-year colleges now make the SAT optional.
.
Critics
have long argued that the weight given to SAT scores gives an unfair
advantage to wealthier students who can afford test-prep classes. That
in itself makes the SAT suspect in some admissions officer's eyes.
"It's leading to an increasing divide in this country of those who can
afford it and those who can't," says Steven Syverson, the former dean
of admissions at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wis.
There are also growing doubts over how well the SAT predicts college performance. A study
produced this year and endorsed by the NACAC looked at the performance
of 123,000 students admitted to college between 2003 and 2010, about 30%
of whom hadn't taken the SAT or its counterpart, the ACT. The study
found no significant differences in college GPAs or graduation rates
between those who took either test and those who didn't.
Syverson
says many admissions officers are looking forward to the rollout in
2016 of a new SAT that is designed to better reflect typical high-school
curricula.
Many admissions
officers are now giving more weight to Advanced Placement tests, which,
like the SAT, are administered by the College Board. In 2013, 2.2
million students took AP tests, up 6% from a year earlier and more than
double the number a decade earlier. AP tests essentially reflect a test
taker's mastery of college-level skill and knowledge; successful test
takers often can skip some entry-level college courses, and some scores
can count toward a major.
"Most deans feel pretty good about AP results since they are based on more of a tight curriculum," Hiss said.
4. Obsessing over class ranking? That's adorable
In
1993, more than 40% of admissions counselors viewed class rank as
"considerably important," according to the NACAC. By 2006, that figure
had declined to under 20%.
Hiss notes that in a small class of
100 students, being outside the top 10% doesn't mean that you're not
capable of doing college-level work. "Is the fourteenth-ranked
student in that class still a good college prospect? The answer is
probably yes."
Where rank
still comes in to play is at larger colleges, where "holistic"
reviews of applicants aren't possible. But at smaller, more selective
schools, the interview, essays and teacher and counselor recommendations get greater weight than rank, the NACAC says.
5. It pays to make nice with your teacher
As
skepticism grows over GPAs and test scores, some admissions officers
are giving more weight to recommendations from high-school teachers and
counselors.
Angel Perez, dean of admissions for Pitzer College in
Claremont, Calif., says the most useful recommendations show that the
student is intellectually curious and contributes to class discussions.
"We also ask 'How does the student respond to setbacks, how does the
student interact in teams?'" Perez says.
6. We only sound exclusive
There
are only about 100 U.S. colleges offered admission to less than a third
of their applicants in 2013, according to the U.S. News & World
Report. But a low admissions rate can help a college look "exclusive" —
improving its scores in national college-rankings — and admissions
officers say that some colleges try to finesse that rate.
"Right,
wrong, or indifferent, our culture values exclusivity," said Perry
Robinson, vice president and director of admissions at Denison
University in Columbus, Ohio. "And yet it is one of the easiest
figures to manipulate."
Tim Groseclose, a professor at George
Mason University who formerly served as a faculty adviser to the
admissions committee at the University of California at Los Angeles,
says some schools deliberately try to play with the numbers by getting
more high school applicants to apply, even if they aren't planning on
attending. And Syverson, the former Lawrence admissions, says that
colleges sometimes count incomplete packages as complete ones, the
better to increase their applications-to-acceptances ratio.
Groseclose
says that sometimes competitive schools encourage students with unique
talents to apply even if their grades and test scores may not be among
the best. And at times, he notes, that can work in the student's
favor: "I know of one school that admitted a student because they
happened to be the stateâs horseshoe-pitching champion."
Does
that mean Tom Cruise's character in "Risky Business" really had a
shot at getting in to Princeton? "Sometimes it can be like hitting the
lottery," Groseclose says.
7. Politics may determine whether you get in
The
role of race and ethnicity has been a polarizing issue in admissions.
The NACAC says that about one third of colleges and universities
consider an applicant's race as a factor.
At
some public universities, racial admissions preferences have been
banned by state law, though critics have accused some schools of working
around those bans. In California, racial preferences were banned by
state referendum in the 1990s. But Groseclose has argued that UCLA got
around that ban during the years when he worked with the admissions
committee by implementing a "holistic" evaluation system that let
admissions officers consider race. (UCLA has denied the "holistic"
review process was an end-around the racial preferences ban.)
One
practice that's generally legal: "Legacy" admissions, where
children of alumni and wealthy donors — or of powerful lawmakers who
have a say in public university funding — get special consideration in
the application process. "If it were up to me, I would make legacy
admissions illegal in both public and private universities, especially
if those schools took a dime of public funding," says Groseclose.
8. We'd rather admit someone who can pay full price
According
to the College Board, 10% of college freshmen in 2013 were foreign
students. One reason colleges woo these international scholars: Many are
wealthy enough to pay the full price of tuition.
At
publicly funded state universities, higher tuition for out-of-state
students often helps subsidize education for state residents. For
example, for an undergraduate at the University of California at
Berkeley, in-state tuition is about $13,000 a year; for an out-of-state
or foreign student, tuition is about $36,000 a year.
"Many
universities look to international students as a panacea to their
financial ills," says Robinson, the Denison admissions dean. "They
are admitting the out-of-state residents because they are a cash cow, a
revenue stream for them," Robinson said. In some states, this has led to
battles among legislators and alumni over whether the number of foreign
and out-of-state students should be capped.
The foreign-student
pipeline can also have pitfalls, says Perez of Pitzer. In some
countries, some students pay big money to sometimes unscrupulous
"agents" to help them gain entry to prestigious U.S. schools. "You
can interview a student for a freshman class and find out the student
who shows up in the fall is completely different, because they hired
someone to do the interview for them," he said. "I didn't get into
admissions to become a police officer, but that's what the job
requires now."
9. We need you more than you need us
After
15 years of steady growth, the number of U.S. high school graduates
leveled off this year at 3.2 million; it's expected to stay at that
level until 2020 before starting to rise again, according to the Western
Interstate Commission for Higher Education.
That means more
colleges will be chasing after fewer students. "The public believes
that it's so hard to get into college, but the reality is that most
colleges are scrambling to find applicants to fill out freshman
classes," says Syverson.
As a result, students who get into more
than one school may be able to do some horse-trading on tuition, notes
Matthew Pittinsky, the CEO of Parchment.com, an online
college-admissions credentials-management website. "It's just like
going to the dealer and negotiating a better rate for your new car,"
he says.
10. Just because you get admitted doesn't mean you'll stay admitted
About
22% of colleges revoked at least one offer of admission in 2009 (the
most recent year studied), according to the NACAC. The most commonly
cited reasons were senioritis-impacted final grades (65%), disciplinary
issues (35%) and falsification of application information (29%).
But in recent years, student postings on social media
have increasingly prompted colleges to take a second look at their some
admission offers. Perez of Pitzer recalls an incident in which a
student the college had decided to admit was found to be harassing a
high-school teacher on Facebook. "It was a difficult situation, but I
pulled the admissions letter before it was printed," Perez says. "I
got hateful tweets, but we are in an uber-selective environment. We just
can't take the chance."
"The
bottom line is that the schools are trying to protect themselves,"
Robinson said. "What they see electronically is not always what they
see on paper."