Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you crazy? Colleges shouldn’t know how many schools kids apply to. Colleges have all of the advantages in this process. Why give them another one?
I dont think this is true. My kids go to one of those schools that limit apps, and the head of counseling told parents colleges have told him to put that in BIG LETTERS on the school profile because it helps the kids so much. If a school knows the kid is only applying to 7 schools and not 27, it matters. Apps never get yield protected for example.
Anonymous wrote:My kid's school only allows students to apply to 12 schools. They feature this restriction prominently on their school profile as a way of signaling that every application is a serious one. I think that helps with admissions and definitely helps with the time suck that is the application process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you crazy? Colleges shouldn’t know how many schools kids apply to. Colleges have all of the advantages in this process. Why give them another one?
I dont think this is true. My kids go to one of those schools that limit apps, and the head of counseling told parents colleges have told him to put that in BIG LETTERS on the school profile because it helps the kids so much. If a school knows the kid is only applying to 7 schools and not 27, it matters. Apps never get yield protected for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Back in 2017, Colby and right after then U Chicago decided they'd let kids self report SAT scores instead of having kids pay College Board $15 or so per application to report scores. And within years, this was standard. It did nothing for colleges - but didn't hurt them either. It was purely for students. There was an unknown downside risk - what if kids lie when they self report. But colleges guess kids wouldnt - because it would have been useless - and they didn't.
It did take a lot of money from The College Board.
Why don't colleges try this again. For example, if colleges would require high schools to include on transcript how many colleges this student has applied to (hs has sent transcript to), apps would eventually tick down a bit.
Or maybe some other ideas?
You can self report at a lot of schools when you apply, but you have to send the official report when you get in.
Anonymous wrote:Are you crazy? Colleges shouldn’t know how many schools kids apply to. Colleges have all of the advantages in this process. Why give them another one?
Anonymous wrote:Back in 2017, Colby and right after then U Chicago decided they'd let kids self report SAT scores instead of having kids pay College Board $15 or so per application to report scores. And within years, this was standard. It did nothing for colleges - but didn't hurt them either. It was purely for students. There was an unknown downside risk - what if kids lie when they self report. But colleges guess kids wouldnt - because it would have been useless - and they didn't.
It did take a lot of money from The College Board.
Why don't colleges try this again. For example, if colleges would require high schools to include on transcript how many colleges this student has applied to (hs has sent transcript to), apps would eventually tick down a bit.
Or maybe some other ideas?
Anonymous wrote:Back in 2017, Colby and right after then U Chicago decided they'd let kids self report SAT scores instead of having kids pay College Board $15 or so per application to report scores. And within years, this was standard. It did nothing for colleges - but didn't hurt them either. It was purely for students. There was an unknown downside risk - what if kids lie when they self report. But colleges guess kids wouldnt - because it would have been useless - and they didn't.
It did take a lot of money from The College Board.
Why don't colleges try this again. For example, if colleges would require high schools to include on transcript how many colleges this student has applied to (hs has sent transcript to), apps would eventually tick down a bit.
Or maybe some other ideas?
Anonymous wrote:Back in 2017, Colby and right after then U Chicago decided they'd let kids self report SAT scores instead of having kids pay College Board $15 or so per application to report scores. And within years, this was standard. It did nothing for colleges - but didn't hurt them either. It was purely for students. There was an unknown downside risk - what if kids lie when they self report. But colleges guess kids wouldnt - because it would have been useless - and they didn't.
It did take a lot of money from The College Board.
Why don't colleges try this again. For example, if colleges would require high schools to include on transcript how many colleges this student has applied to (hs has sent transcript to), apps would eventually tick down a bit.
Or maybe some other ideas?