My
posts this fall have all been pretty weighty (not to mention very preachy), and
given that I’m drowning in a pile of college recommendations due November 1,
this post will be a change of pace, providing news and updates on four issues
I’ve addressed previously.
1)
In
Indianapolis, the NACAC Assembly approved a number of changes to the Statement
of Principles of Good Practice (SPGP), adding language having to do with the
use of international agents, the fact that a high-school transcript should
include all courses attempted (rather than being edited when a student retakes
a course and earns a higher grade—a possible future topic for this blog), and
how the May 1 Candidates’ Reply Date applies to institutionally-affiliated
financial aid and scholarships. I
applaud the NACAC Admissions Practices committee under the leadership of Todd
Rinehart for their work in updating the document.
One
of the issues related to the May 1 deadline involves housing (for those of you
who have memorized the SPGP chapter and verse, it can be found in section
II.B.5.a). Last spring I wrote about the
practice of institutions requiring a housing deposit and making it
non-refundable, and I have reason to believe that post may have helped move
action on that issue.
2)
Duke
has become the first Common Application member to add a question on its
application about sexual orientation/gender identity since the Common app’s
2011 decision not to include that topic among the questions asked as part of
the application. Duke’s question differs
from other colleges such as Elmhurst College in Illinois and the University of
Iowa that have previously asked similar application questions in that it
invites students to write a short, optional essay rather than check a box.
I
wrote about this issue back in December, 2012 after the University of Iowa
announced that it was adding a question about sexual orientation/identity to
its application. At the time I applauded
Iowa for being inclusive and welcoming to the LBGT community, but thought there
were better ways to communicate that stance than through the application. I continue to believe that the application
should be used only to gather information that is relevant to making an
admissions decision (which did not seem to be the case at Iowa), but by asking
through an optional essay rather than an optional checkbox, Duke is giving students
an opportunity to communicate something that is central to who they are and how
they view the world, and that would seem relevant for admissions purposes.
The
problem is that the prompt is vague enough that Duke is few students will know
what the essay is designed to elicit. Here
is the prompt: “Duke University seeks a
talented, engaged student body that embodies the wide range of human
experience; we believe that the diversity of our students makes our community
stronger. If you’d like to share a
perspective you bring or experiences you’ve had to help us understand you better—perhaps
related to a community you belong to, your sexual orientation or gender
identity, or your family or cultural background—we encourage you to do so. Real people are reading your application, and
we want to do our best to understand and appreciate the real people applying to
Duke.”
The
essay prompt is deliberately vague and open-ended, and my wonder-about is how
many essays Duke will get from students other than the target group. Just this morning, one of my students who is
applying Early Decision to Duke was talking about possible answers to that
question, none of which are what the question is designed to elicit. How many Duke applicants will write about
their upper class cultural background, or their suburban New Jersey
community? Will Duke welcome an essay
from a straight male who writes about his gender identity or sexual orientation?
3)
Bennington
College has joined Goucher in making a high school transcript optional for
applicants. Bennington has introduced
the “Dimensional Application” (the term has its origins in a quote about Bennington
students by poet e.e. cummings) that gives Bennington applicants the
opportunity to “curate” their applications by deciding what relevant
information to include—portfolios, research or experiments designed and
conducted by the student, writing (reflective and/or analytical), letters of
recommendation, and even transcripts. As
I wrote about several weeks ago, I’m not sold on the idea that a transcript
should be optional in evaluating a student’s readiness for college, but I like
the concept that a student should have some control over what their
“self-portrait” looks like and what media best communicates their essence.
4)
U.S. News has announced that two colleges
have submitted incorrect data for the 2015 rankings. What is different from previous cases is that
there is no intent to manipulate data for the institution’s benefit. Rollins College underreported the number of
acceptances by 550 students, changing its acceptance rate from 47.2% to
58.8%. That change did not impact
Rollins ranking. Lindenwood College in Missouri
has been moved to the “Unranked” category because it reported 12,411 alumni
donors when the actual figure was 2411.
Because alumni giving rate counts 5% of the ranking, that clerical error
inflated Lindenwood’s ranking. U.S. News rankings guru Bob Morse
reported both cases in his Morse Code blog, but in Lindenwood’s case doesn’t
provide any insight into how much the error would have impacted its ranking (I’m
sure the formula is considered proprietary or top secret, but it would be
fascinating to see how a mistake like in one category changes the overall
ranking—on second thought, U.S. News probably
doesn’t want anyone to realize how fluid the rankings are). I have previous posted suggesting that U.S. News would best serve the public by
putting all colleges in the “Unranked” category. Two other questions, one pragmatic
and one philosophical: Didn’t U.S. News find it odd that the number of
alumni donors was off by 10000, and does that suggest that there is very little
analysis of the data it receives? And
who thinks that alumni giving rate shows alumni loyalty and satisfaction rather
than a successful annual giving operation?
That’s
all for this edition. I’ll be back after
November 1.
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