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![]() Why the best schools can't pick the best
kids
- and vice versa
By
Barry Schwartz
SPRING
IS HERE, and along with the crocuses comes the annual admissions panic.
High school kids get anxiety attacks as they approach their mailboxes.
And in some parts of the U.S., parents stress as they await a phone
call from their preschool of choice. The
high school kids have tortured themselves to build up stunning
credentials and then communicate those credentials strategically in a
college application. And the parents of toddlers have struggled to find
a way to distinguish their 18-month-old from all the rest. And so
the competition trickles down: The road to Harvard goes through the
"right" high school, the "right" elementary school, the "right"
preschool. Thus the anguished "admissions essays" from the parents of
kids still in diapers. I
believe that it has bad effects on winners as well as losers. I'm not
just talking about the financial strain on parents, who can spend as
much as it costs for a year at these elite universities on SAT prep
courses and personal tutoring, on private college counselors and now on
"getting-into-college" summer camps, costing as much as $3,000 for two
weeks. And
I'm not just talking about the stress on students. It's what the
competition itself is stealing from our most talented youth. They
sacrifice risk-taking and intellectual curiosity on the altar of
demonstrable success. Moreover (as documented by a great deal of
research), because students are doing the work they do in and out of
school for the wrong reasons — not because they are interested in
learning — the intense competition undermines their motivation to
continue to learn for the sake of gaining understanding. As a
result, even those who excel enough to get into Harvard, Stanford or
UCLA are likely to be less inspired students once that goal has been
achieved. By making themselves so competitive, our selective
institutions are subverting their aims. Why?
Luthar found that one significant reason is intense pressure to achieve. They
are assuming a level of precision of assessment that is unattainable. Social
scientists Detlof von Winterfeldt and Ward Edwards made this case 30
years ago when they articulated what they called the "principle of the
flat maximum." What
the principle argues is that when comparing the qualifications of
people who are bunched up at the very top of the curve, the amount of
inherent uncertainty in evaluating their credentials is larger than the
measurable differences among candidates. Applied
to college admissions, this principle implies that it is impossible to
know which excellent student (or school) will be better than which
other excellent student (or school). Uncertainty
of evaluation makes the hair-splitting to distinguish among excellent
students a waste of time; the degree of precision required exceeds the
inherent reliability of the data. It
also makes the U.S. News & World Report annual rankings of colleges
silly for assuming a precision of measurement that is unattainable. But
plenty of high school superstars turn out to be supernovas who burn out
while at college. In my 35 years at Swarthmore, I've seen more than my
share of "can't miss" freshmen miss (not for intellectual reasons but
for psychological ones including all those pre-college years spent
becoming "can't miss"). Surprisingly,
there are no good studies on how ranking at the time of admission
predicts college achievement, not to mention achievement in life after
college. Chance
factors (roommate assignment, romantic successes or failures, or which
English professor evaluates your first papers) might have a bigger
effect on success and satisfaction than the tiny differences among
applicants (or schools) within the range of acceptability. So
once a set of "good enough" students or "good enough" schools has been
identified, it probably doesn't matter much which one you choose; or if
it does matter, there is no way to know in advance what the right
choice is. Then
the names of all the "good enough" students could be placed in a
metaphorical hat, with the "winners" drawn at random for admission. Though
a high school student will still have to work hard to be "good enough"
for Yale, she won't have to distort her life in the way she would if
she had to be the "best." The only reason left for participating in all
those enrichment programs would be interest, not competitive advantage. Admissions
people like to believe that they have the diagnostic acumen to look at,
say, 8,000 wonderful applicants and pluck from them, with high
accuracy, the 1,600 "super-wonderful" ones. But
there is little evidence to support this claim. So picking a fifth of
the 8,000 "good enough" applicants at random might be just as good a
way of producing a great class as today's tortured scrutiny of folders. At the
very least, colleges and universities should consider doing the
following experiment: Put a random half of the applicants through the
normal admissions process and the other half through a "good
enough/luck of the draw" admissions process. Then
track the performance of the students admitted from these two sets of
applicants over the course of their college careers. The
desperate efforts of high school students to climb to the top on the
backs of their classmates could stop. Adolescents could once again
devote at least some of their time to figuring out what kinds of people
they are and want to be. Parents
could relax a little about high school, middle school and even
preschool placements. And the result, I'm convinced, would not be worse
students at our top institutions but more interesting, more curious and
better motivated ones. If
nothing else, these data would make for a good assessment of current
admissions practices. Success
is about talent and hard work. Luck has nothing to do with it. This
attitude may well contribute to a lack of sympathy, sometimes even
bordering on disdain, for life's losers. I
believe that this attitude is profoundly false. It is
not the case that people always get what they deserve. There just
aren't enough top rungs on the Ivy League's (or life's) ladders for
everyone to fit. If
talented and hardworking people are forced to confront the element of
chance in life's outcomes when they (or their kids) fail to get into
the "best" college, they may be more inclined to acknowledge the role
of luck in shaping the lives of the people around them. And
this may make them more empathic toward others — and a good deal more
committed to creating more room at the top. ~ ~ ~
GT
Adults gifted/talented/high ability Highly
Sensitive intensity / sensitivity resources : articles sites books introversion /
shyness. ~ ~ ~ |
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