logo
#

Latest news with #collegeAdmissions

Eight Expectations For Selecting A College
Eight Expectations For Selecting A College

Forbes

time12-06-2025

  • General
  • Forbes

Eight Expectations For Selecting A College

The college selection season is in full bloom and many students have accepted or are considering their college of choice. It's also not too late to change one's mind. Determining a good college fit is often left to what colleges tell us about themselves. Some colleges like to rely on national rankings that include factors that have little to do with the practice of learning and teaching (e.g., number of doctoral candidates). Others rely on the records and reputation of sports teams to determine academic prowess, again a dubious metric. Most often, students choose colleges based on two factors: cost and convenience. There are, however, other things to consider and expect when making a college decision, the top eight expectations of which are as follows: The bottom line is the student must be more savvy than ever when selecting a college. With the cost of tuition continuing to rise, students (also known as consumers) should demand they are getting the most out of their expenditures. The best way to discern which college is best for each student is by asking about the above-mentioned expectations. Ask the admissions staff, faculty, and administrators, do the research on what matters most, and then make your decision accordingly. Discernment now is the best path to a happier and secure future.

‘We Are the Most Rejected Generation'
‘We Are the Most Rejected Generation'

New York Times

time15-05-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

‘We Are the Most Rejected Generation'

Not long ago, I was at Williams College, speaking with a fascinating and terrifically observant senior named David Wignall. We were talking about what it was like to be young these days, and he made a point that I'd never considered. 'We are the most rejected generation,' he said. He's right. He pointed to the admission rates at elite universities. By 1959, about half of American college applicants applied to just one school. But now you meet students who feel that they have to apply to 20 or 30 colleges in the hopes that there will be one or two that won't reject them. In the past two decades, the number of students applying to the 67 most selective colleges has tripled, to nearly two million a year, while the number of places at those schools hasn't come close to keeping up. Roughly 54,000 students applied to be part of the Harvard class of 2028, and roughly 1,950 were accepted. That means that about 52,050 were rejected. The same basic picture applies to the summer internship race. Goldman Sachs, for example, has 2,700 internship positions and receives roughly 315,000 applicants, which means that about 312,300 get rejected. I recently spoke with one college student who applied to 40 summer internships and was rejected by 39. I ran into some students who told me they felt they had to fill out 150 to 250 internship applications each year to be confident there would be a few that wouldn't reject them. Things get even worse when students leave school and enter the job market. They enter what I've come to think of as the seventh circle of Indeed hell. Applying for jobs online is easy, so you have millions of people sending hundreds of applications each into the great miasma of the internet, and God knows which impersonal algorithm is reading them. I keep hearing and reading stories about young people who applied to 400 jobs and got rejected by all of them. It seems we've created a vast multilayered system that evaluates the worth of millions of young adults and, most of the time, tells them they are not up to snuff. I wanted to know what it was like to live in this sort of hypercompetitive atmosphere, so I had phone conversations with current college students and recent graduates, focusing on elite schools where I assumed the ethos of exclusion might be strongest. I asked the students if the 'most rejected generation' thesis resonated with them. Every single one said it did. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Liberals Should Focus on Class, Not Race
Liberals Should Focus on Class, Not Race

Bloomberg

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Bloomberg

Liberals Should Focus on Class, Not Race

Race-based affirmative action no longer has a place in college admissions after the Supreme Court in 2023 eliminated what had been an attempt by universities to create multiracial campuses. In Class Matters: The Fight To Get Beyond Race Preferences, Reduce Inequality, and Build Real Diversity at America's Colleges, Richard D. Kahlenberg, a liberal who testified for the conservatives who brought those cases against Harvard University and the University of North Carolina, lays out his decades-long push for university admissions, and Democrats, to focus on class rather than race. Kahlenberg is director of the American Identity Project at the Progressive Policy Institute and teaches at George Washington University. This transcript has been edited and condensed. Nia-Malika Henderson: The Trump administration sees diversity, equity and inclusion as 'woke' so they're moving to strip DEI out of the federal government and elsewhere. What do you make of that?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store