Weather | Beachcam
Login | Contact Us | Staff | Site Map | Archives | Alerts | Electronic Edition | Subscribe to the paper

HomeEducationEducation: College

High-school students share a grim opinion of college admissions

New research shows high-school students share a grim opinion of college admissions.

"There is something terribly wrong with this process," said one student interviewed by Education Conservancy, the Portland, Oregon-based nonprofit behind the study. "There is so much propaganda," said another student. "Colleges should try less to sell themselves and more to act interested in students and in education."

Jerry Slavonia, CEO of CampusExplorer.com, says the findings don't surprise him. "Our Web site provides the opposite experience. We promote school attributes without hype -- essentially leveling the field, and promoting an educational interest that surpasses rankings."

Ne sses -- even cheating on tests -- solely to enhance their candidacy. They lamented pursuing numerous extracurricular activities, instead of a particular passion, to appear well-rounded. They complained of colleges courting kids who had zero chance of acceptance.

Overall, the students described the admissions experience as dizzying, disenchanting and deceptive.

"They've confirmed what all of us on the front lines knew in our guts," says Jennifer Delahunty, dean of admissions and financial aid at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio.

The study is part of Education Conservancy's effort to convince colleges to abandon rankings, specifically those compiled by U.S.News & World Report.

According to Lloyd Thacker, Education Conservancy Executive Director, rankings caused universities to rely on a cottage industry developed to help them hype their selectivity. The result: a commercialized admissions process that has cheapened the value of learning.

Says Thacker: "This research shows college presidents that they might have some responsibility for that -- and, that they need to do something about it."

Off with fairs and information sessions, say Thacker and his supporters. The solution? Comprehensive Web sites helping students broaden their college searches.

Several such operations, including the University and College Accountability Network, funded by a group of universities,have already gone live in the last year. CampusExplorer.com, Zinch.com and Admish.com, among others, feature interactive forums and advanced search options designed to link up students and schools with similar interests.

Thacker's group is also developing an Internet search engine.

"The key here is for students to take ownership of their search," says Chuck Bachman, senior associate director of admissions at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania. "View this as an experience to engage oneself -- rather than a prize." SOURCE CampusExplorer.com

/Web site: www.campusexplorer.com / CO: CampusExplorer.com ST: California IN: EDU HED CPR MLM SU: CHI SVY JA-AE -- NYFNSS01 -- 5423 10/25/2007 05:06 EDT www.prnewswire.com

Discussions
Discuss this article
(Requires free registration.)

Article discussions on this site are to support community debates of issues related to our stories and editorials.

Discussions should not stray from the subject of the story or editorial.

We do not allow the following:

  • Posts that degrade others on the basis of gender, race, class, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual orientation or disability.
  • Disparaging remarks, abusive language or obscene comments.
  • Threats, whether obvious or veiled.

We reserve the right to delete threads and/or ban users for these or other reasons we deem necessary.

Opinions are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.

Username:

Password:
(Forgotten your password?)

Your Turn:

Loading videos... If you don't see them shortly, you may need to download the Flash Player.