Two Years and a Week
September 26, 2020
This past week, admissions officers, high school counselors, and independent college counselors gathered for the annual meeting of the National Association for College Admission Counseling, known simply as NACAC (pronounced KNACK-ack).
We were supposed to be meeting in Minneapolis— in person. Instead, we were all sitting in front of our screens from our homes and offices. It was yet another meeting done virtually.
It was at NACAC two years ago, in Salt Lake City, where the reporting for my new book really started. It’s where I met high school counselors that ended up in the book, like Diane Campbell, or admissions deans who would eventually let me inside their process, like Chris Gruber at Davidson. It’s also where I began a series of interviews with main characters in the book, like Bob Morse of U.S. News & World Report.
As today’s newsletter will explore, I’ve learned a lot about the world of college admissions in the 2+ years of reporting for the book—and even in the week or so since its release.
? Two can’t miss virtual events next week:
For parents of high schoolers: On Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET/3 p.m. PT, I’ll be part of a virtual college fair hosted by Verto Education where students can chat with representatives of more than 60 colleges. For part of the evening, I’ll be discussing how college is changing because of the pandemic and will be joined by the president of College of Wooster, Sarah Bolton, to discuss some of the issues on the minds of parents this fall.
· More details and register here.
For college leaders: On Thursday at 3 p.m. ET/Noon PT, I’ll be leading a conversation about how to reframe the affordability discussion in higher ed with Southern New Hampshire President Paul LeBlanc and Hocking College President Betty Young.
· More details and register here.
It’s a question I’ve been getting often in media interviews the past week: After 20+ years of covering higher education, what surprised me about the two years I spent reporting the book?
Many things surprised me, so it's difficult to just pick one. So let's try three:
1. The applicant pools at selective colleges are deeper than many of us imagine.
- It’s not that there are so many more top-notch students applying to college; it’s that the top ones from Los Angeles and Chicago and Atlanta and Buffalo are now all applying to the same selective schools. And they’re applying to way more of them.
- There’s no denying that the competition for a seat at a specific college is much tougher for today’s students than it was for their parents. But it’s not true that getting into any selective college is actually that much harder.
- Even top colleges accept higher numbers of students than they need because they know only between a third and a half of those accepted will say yes to their offer.
- After sitting in admissions offices for a year, one thing I realized is that I fell into the same trap many readers did after weeks of reviewing files: after a while the numbers and key identifiers that accompany the applications begin to look the same. Everyone wants to major in biology, psychology, or business. They all scored a 1390 on the SAT and have a 3.7 GPA.
The bottom line: The more time teenagers spend making sure their college list has a mix of schools on it, as well as think about the academic, social, and financial fit of each of them, the better off they'll be at the end of the process.
2. Our vocabulary around admissions has lost meaning.
- Elite, prestigious, merit, fair are among the words I heard so often in my reporting.
- Prestige was originally a derogatory term, defined as “illusion” and “conjuring tricks” in Latin and French.
- Elite is now almost exclusively defined by how hard it is to get into college, not actually what happens once you’re there.
- Merit is a word whose definition has changed substantially over the last half century. I probably heard 10 different definitions of the word merit from 10 different people while reporting the book.
- Fair, well, let me have Robin Hennes from the University of Washington explain that one: “No matter how you review applications, it’s not going to seem fair if your child is denied admission.”
The bottom line: Does going to a top-ranked school help lead to a successful life? Sure. But there are so many other factors contributing to one’s ultimate path that focusing exclusively on this one narrow stretch of it seems out of whack. In the end, college is a staging ground. It’s one of many stops you’ll make throughout life, but it’s not the only one, and certainly not the last.
3. Marketing and rankings have made admissions worse, not better.
- The marketing from colleges is designed to make students focus on a “dream” school and a “perfect fit.” It’s not about the similarities that colleges have—it’s about the purported uniqueness of each.
- No one sends high school juniors a glossy brochure explaining that the top liberal arts colleges are pretty similar. Or a viewbook about engineering co-op programs that says here are a couple of good options for you. Who can blame students for focusing instead on individual brands? That’s what colleges are selling.
- Teenagers might like that their college lists include only top-ranked colleges, yet what they typically don’t realize is that they’re often the ones footing the bulk of the bill to build or maintain that prestige. A study of a major university ranked by U.S. News in the mid-30s found that it would have to increase its spending by $112 million per year to jump into the top 20, about $86,000 per student.
The bottom line: Look up and out beyond the top 10 or 20 or whatever in the rankings. Use the college search as a learning experience. The students I met who ended up being most satisfied with their final choice were the ones who embraced the ambiguity of the process rather than got fixated on one or two schools.
What I Learned in 1 Week
It’s been a whirlwind week and a half since the book was released on September 15. Thank you for all your support. I was on CBS This Morning on Friday to talk about the book (and also on the CTM podcast). The book landed on the USA Today bestsellers list. Last night, Who Gets In and Why rose to #71 among all books sold on Amazon and it's headed to its third printing in a few weeks.
In interviews and events with parents, one theme continues to emerge for me about higher ed, especially in these times: frustration that college is the gatekeeper to a better life.
Why it matters: Whether someone goes to college and graduates has long been correlated with family income. What’s different now, however, is that I’m hearing a growing frustration from parents in more affluent zip codes. Last weekend, I appeared on a virtual town hall with Scott Galloway, the NYU professor who has become a media regular in recent months. The anger at higher ed in the chat was noticeable.
“It used to be that spring was a season of celebration for parents of high school seniors. Now it’s a season of worry and dread about getting into college and then paying for it.” -- Scott Galloway
What’s happening: As the pathway to a college degree seems to be narrowing for too many families, parents want more choices for their kids. Many on our virtual town hall last week asked about community colleges as a place to start; less-expensive in-state options among four-year colleges; and alternative credentials, like Google’s certificate program.
Behind the numbers: Students from households earning more than $100,000 annually were increasingly enrolling in community colleges before the pandemic, according to Sallie Mae’ How Americans Pay for College.
What’s next: Expect more four-year colleges to build faster and cheaper ways for students to earn new types of credentials in the coming years. It’s already starting to happen. Earlier this month, Drake University, a private institution in Iowa, announced it’s creating a two-year pathway for students.
The bottom line: The anxiety I’m sensing now about higher ed is heightened from what I witnessed while reporting the book. It reflects a broader concern about the world we live in today—it’s harsher, more cutthroat, and more stratified than when the parents of today’s high school seniors applied to college. Stability is increasingly scarce. So we want to pull out as many of the stops we can when it comes to college. The problem is that many of those approaches to college are being closed off to more people.
SUPPLEMENTS
How to Predict Merit Aid in a Strange College Application Season — www.nytimes.comStudents may have no test scores, altered grades and compromised extracurricular activities. So how will colleges dole out the discounts? Will graduate schools face a reckoning in 2020? — futureupodcast.wordpress.com
Michael Horn and I talk to David Poole of the University of Miami College of Engineering and Jillian Baer of Liaison International about graduate admissions in 2020 and beyond on the latest episode of our podcast.
Fall 2020 Enrollment Data — www.opencampusmedia.orgUndergraduate enrollments are down (by 2.5 percent) and graduate enrollments are up (by nearly 4 percent).
As always, thanks for subscribing.
Cheers — Jeff
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