The College Admissions Process

2017 ◽  
pp. 179-186
Author(s):  
Denise N. Sanata ◽  
Molly A. Mistretta
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilee Jones ◽  
Kenneth R. Ginsburg ◽  
Martha M. Jablow

The college admissions process is an ideal time to help teens learn to manage stress...before they show up in your office with complaints of anxiety, depression, or the results of risky behavior. Is your teen stressing over college admittance? Are you? Cowritten by a former top college admissions dean and a leading pediatrician, this first-of-its-kind book delivers strategies for surviving the admissions process while strengthening parent-child relationships, managing the stress of applying to college, and building resilience to meet challenges today and in the future. Less Stress, More Success is just what parents and teens need to thrive during this important rite of passage into adulthood. For Parents: How to encourage true high achievement, rather than perfectionism, Important dos and don'ts about the admissions process and how you can most effectively help your child, Why and when some forms of "helping" undermine your teenager's self-confidence and chances of admission, How to turn deadlines into opportunities to learn time-management and organization skills, How you can encourage positive strategies for handling stress and building resilience. For Teens: How to evaluate campus culture to find the right fit for you, Ways to manage your parents and your friends, Tips for the college interview, Letting your true, authentic self come through in your admissions essay, How your body handles stress...and what you can do to feel better and stay healthy. Includes a Personalized Stress Management Plan!


Author(s):  
Eric K Furstenberg

Abstract This article develops a theoretical model of college admissions to investigate the effects of banning affirmative action admissions policies on the efficiency of the admissions process. Previous work in this area has shown that prohibiting affirmative action causes inefficiency when college quality is an increasing function of diversity. This article identifies an additional reason why colleges and universities use racial preferences in admissions, setting aside explicit demands for diversity. In the theoretical model, the racial identity of the applicants is relevant information for making inferences about an applicant's true academic ability. Preventing admissions officers from using this information results in inefficient selection of applicants, even if diversity does not explicitly enter the objective of the university. Thus, affirmative action is justified solely on informational grounds.


Education ◽  
2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia McDonough ◽  
Shannon Calderone

By the simplest of definitions, college admissions represents a process of entry leading to enrollment in some form of postsecondary education—a process that ensures an institution is identified, paperwork is completed, qualifications are confirmed, and the student chooses an institution in which to enroll. This definitional simplicity, however, belies the complex and highly contestable nature of the college admissions process and the role it plays in ongoing debates over social status mobility, merit, and the equitable nature of K–12 schooling opportunities. How college admissions has evolved into a touchstone for such heady debate is in large part the result of a confluence of factors: a well-established correlation between a college degree and lifetime income earnings, a dramatic increase over the past fifty years in the number of students who both aspire and ultimately enroll in some form of postsecondary education, and a desire by colleges to gain greater market advantage through improving their comparative standing, which relies heavily on admissions selectivity, reputation, and alumni giving as well as success in the job market. These demographic and economic shifts have resulted in similar shifts in public sentiment over the value of higher education to future life chances and the conversion of a four-year degree to income earnings over the lifespan. A great body of research has provided insight into the macro- and micro-level forces that mediate postsecondary opportunity. The brief essays and citation lists provided in this article capture some of this complexity by conceptualizing the college admissions process as a field of activity that, as educational researchers have so often argued, contributes to a form of social sorting vis-à-vis the interactions of institutions, individuals, and marketplace forces. This article begins by suggesting that the college admissions process is best characterized as a series of choices related to college going as mediated by race, class, and gender. Also considered in this discussion is the influence of K–12 settings on sustaining (and derailing) educational aspirations. Highlighted research also focuses on the influence of outreach and families on individual college aspirations, institutional strategic decision making that drives the admissions marketplace, as well as the often confounding ways in which business and public policy interests test the standards of fairness via special admissions considerations. Finally, this article offers some key resource options for further study on college admissions and related topics.


Class Warfare ◽  
2015 ◽  
pp. 79-104
Author(s):  
Lois Weis ◽  
Kristin Cipollone ◽  
Heather Jenkins

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarab Anand ◽  
Triptish Bhatia

The high school Class of 2021, already facing challenges of their stressful junior year has had multiple changes to their academic routines, athletic & extracurricular opportunities and standardized testing amid the COVID-19 pandemic. With the lockdown, it is also facing unprecedented changes in the college admissions process.  This study was undertaken as a survey of rising seniors in US high schools to understand handling of academic challenges, students’ stress regarding college admissions, changing landscape of the application cycle and attitudes towards strength of applications due to the pandemic. Survey was designed on google forms and was circulated among rising seniors through social media and snowballing methods. The data was analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics.  A total of 331 students responded, majority were females, white and from public schools. Significant stress regarding college admissions was reported by students (63.6%) before pandemic and increase in stress (72.3%) afterwards. About 75% had already taken ACT/SAT, the majority was not satisfied with their scores but 90% planned to re(take) despite colleges declaring a test optional process. 60% of participants with change in summer plans and 70% of students unable to visit colleges reported increase in stress. Level of access correlated with perceived support from college counselors (r=0.677) and uncertainty regarding financial aid and athletic scholarships contributed to stress.  Two broad themes emerged while studying COVID-19 related increase in stress levels and factors contributing to that change: uncertainty about one’s own application strength and stress due to changes in institutional policies.          


1983 ◽  
Vol 67 (460) ◽  
pp. 47-59
Author(s):  
Jean A. Scott

2017 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 236-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jared Furuta

This article examines the rise of ‘‘test-optional’’ college admissions policies since the 1990s. I argue that the rationalization of college admissions policies after World War II contributed to the rise of ‘‘meritocratic’’ stratification (in policy) and standardized tests, like the SAT, but it also led to the expansion and legitimation of the roles of student and school personhood in the admissions process. Schools more committed to enlarged conceptions of student personhood are more likely to adopt a test-optional policy, in order to recruit students who fit the distinctive characteristics of their school identity. To test the argument, I use a comprehensive data set of 1,640 colleges and universities in the United States and discrete-time event history models from 1987 to 2015. I also assess alternative arguments that emphasize economic or prestige-driven motives. Liberal arts colleges and schools committed to several dimensions of student personhood are more likely to adopt test-optional policies, net of other factors.


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