Elite Universities are unlikely to change their ways

Some things never change, and elite universities are no different. College admissions is rife with a bias for the status quo. We exhibit an implicit preference for a system whose alternatives are impossible to imagine, also known as system justification.

Politicians will not reform a system that benefits their offspring and helps fill their staff. Parents with multiple children start to suspect something is off once their youngest finishes applying. By then, they’ve moved on to other concerns, such as badgering professors to give their child the A they perceive their expensive tuition entitles. Politicians and society’s elite are not incentivized to reform a system where the rules are stacked in favor of their offspring and family friends. If anything, elites push back against efforts to enroll more diverse classes and lobby to maintain practices such as legacy admissions, large donations, and spaces for recruited athletes playing obscure sports, which I highlight in other content.

Universities likewise implement changes at a glacial pace because they fail to coordinate. One positive step was discontinuing the deeply flawed ACT/SAT “writing section” experiment introduced in the mid-2000s, which eventually took over a decade for universities to terminate. There was an interim period in the early 2010s where some universities phased out the writing section whereas others declared that valid exams must have the writing; this inconsistent messaging produced untold confusion and unnecessary exam sittings for unaware students. Applicants today wonder whether they need the additional (and more expensive) writing section alongside juggling which universities do and don’t Superscore (taking the highest sections from different dates), a practice that incentivizes sitting for many exams.

Administrators understand students will apply in record numbers regardless of how arduous the requirements. Why bother with transparency when public relations consultants suggest that they can simply make a button on their website, like Kentucky does, that assures you it’s easy? Unless there is a substantial decrease in demand for elite university degrees, which I don’t forecast happening, then the runaway admissions train will continue barreling along its tracks. Reforms arise only after widespread public outcry, as in the Varsity Blues scandal, or when a critical mass of their peer institutions moves first. Universities are unlikely to move first, like by discontinuing Early Decision practices, for fear that they may be left behind in the student recruitment arms race.

Kevin Martin

Originally from Dallas, Texas, Kevin Martin, the founder of Tex Admissions® LLC, graduated Phi Beta Kappa with highest honors from the University of Texas at Austin in spring 2011. The recipient of over thirty honors, scholarships, and recognitions, the first-generation college student earned a Bachelor of Arts in Government, History, and the Humanities Honors Program.

UT-Austin honored him with its highest distinction as one of three graduates selected out of approximately 8,000 members to represent the Class of 2011 in President Powers’s Commencement speech. Kevin entered into the Liberal Arts Honors program as a freshman and completed a certificate in international conflict through the Bridging Disciplines Program. His research in conflict and genocide took him abroad to Scotland, Bosnia, and Rwanda culminating in a peer-reviewed publication. In 2014, Kevin completed a prestigious Fulbright Fellowship teaching English in Malaysia. He has explored over 120 countries.

He served as an admissions counselor for the University of Texas at Austin in the Dallas Admissions Center from June 2011 – January 2014. Kevin worked in approximately 65 DFW area high schools serving the needs of students and their families ranging from low-income, inner-city schools to the most affluent. He has experience evaluating and scoring thousands of undergraduate applications. He served on the appeals committee for students requesting reconsideration, and he exceeded expectations on his annual performance reviews.

https://texadmissions.com
Previous
Previous

Many college applicants are more talented than their admissions reviewers

Next
Next

What is the scope of the college admissions madness? What qualifies as an elite university?