Thursday, December 4, 2008

Education

USN Current Issue

Matchmaker, Matchmaker

The majority of kids are chasing the minority of schools. A broader search could find a better fit

By Linda Kulman
Posted 8/19/07

When Taylor Corbett, 18, of Lake Forest Park, Wash., got turned down by his first choice--Bowdoin College, in Brunswick, Maine--the Corbett family was on Day 4 of a weeklong power outage. Bowdoin, with its mix of serious but friendly students, seemed the quintessential college to Corbett, and he couldn't envision himself anywhere else. With no TV, computer, or video games to distract him, he was left sitting in the dark with his anxieties.

In a less literal sense, Corbett's plight is familiar to many high school students searching for a college. The fear is that they won't get into their dream school, and life as they know it will be over. That's not all bad. "A little anxiety is OK," acknowledges Marybeth Kravets, a college counselor at Deerfield High School in Deerfield, Ill. "They're sending out an application to people they don't know."

Among the nation's 2,533 four-year schools, however, hyperselectivity is the exception: On average, the college acceptance rate is above 70 percent. "That statistic alone should suggest that there's a spot at a four-year institution for anyone who wants one," says David Hawkins, public policy director at the National Association for College Admission Counseling. Each May, on its website (nacacnet.org), NACAC lists schools that still have spots in that fall's freshman class. This year, more than 300 colleges responded.

Even so, getting in can seem daunting. Part of the difficulty, says Arlene Ingram, a guidance counselor at Cape Henry Collegiate School in Virginia Beach, Va., is that "the majority of the kids want the minority of colleges." Martha O'Connell, executive director of Colleges That Change Lives Inc., a nonprofit agency, agrees: "There are still many colleges being underenrolled just because people flock to name-brand colleges." Adds Maria Furtado, admissions director at Clark University in Massachusetts: "We're quick to judge that if we know it, it must be good."

In fact, statistics don't necessarily bear out that assumption. An annual survey by the Center for Postsecondary Research at Indiana University finds that more selective institutions don't guarantee a more satisfying collegiate experience. Rather, what students gain from attending college has less to do with where they go than it does with such factors as student-teacher involvement and the activities they do while they're there. Choosing a school based on its pedigree was easier when there were fewer students in the mix. But the number of graduating high school seniors is expected to peak at 3.3 million in 2009. In 1974, the last time the country had roughly the same number of young people finishing high school, only about half pursued a college degree. Now more than two thirds do so, and enrollment at four-year institutions is projected to grow by about 165,000 a year through 2015. The more students worry about getting in, the more colleges they apply to, which, in turn, can lower everyone's odds at any given school. Forty years ago, 43 percent of incoming freshmen applied to only one college. Now more than half of all students apply to at least four schools. Corbett applied to 12. "I wanted options," he says.

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