From the fall of 1999 to the spring of 2000, New York Times education reporter Jacques Steinberg was given unparalleled access to an entire admissions season at Wesleyan University in Connecticut. In that time, he discovered just how difficult it could be to winnow down a list of nearly seven thousand applicants to seven hundred freshmen for the class of 2004.Steinberg follows an admissions officer and his eight counterparts through the daunting task of recruiting students nationwide, reading through each of their applications, and meeting behind closed doors for a week in March to finalize the incoming class.He also recounts the personal experiences of a half dozen high school seniors of various ethnic and economic backgrounds as they struggle through the often byzantine selection process. Find out why:* high SATs and many extracurricular activities are not always critical* a student's "story" can either be helpful or detrimental* one student with a 1480 SAT score and high grades can face stiff competition from another three thousand miles away whose board score is 900 and who has a handful of Ds on her report card* an officer peering into the application pool is often most excited to see a reflection of him- or herself staring back
Jacques Steinberg Livres
Jacques Steinberg est l'auteur du best-seller du New York Times, "The Gatekeepers: Inside the Admissions Process of a Premier College". Depuis plus de deux décennies, il travaille comme journaliste pour le New York Times, où il est actuellement correspondant national pour l'éducation du journal. Steinberg anime également "The Choice", le blog des Times sur les admissions universitaires qu'il a créé. Son travail explore les subtilités du système éducatif, offrant aux lecteurs une perspective de l'intérieur du processus d'admission dans les institutions d'élite.


The College Conversation
- 288pages
- 11 heures de lecture
This guide offers practical advice and reassurance for navigating the college application process, aiming to keep anxious parents and confused students grounded. Unlike typical "How to Get In" guides, it focuses on facilitating difficult conversations, providing a step-by-step approach to discussing key topics with less stress. Organized chronologically, it covers the admissions and financial aid process, starting from the initial college list assembly to the receipt of decisions, and includes insights for the first year of college. Key discussions include preliminary conversations about a child's identity and the type of college that would suit them, selecting a college based on curriculum, culture, and community, crafting effective applications, evaluating acceptances with financial considerations, and transitioning from high school to college life. This resource aims to equip parents, students, and counselors with credible, level-headed information and a much-needed perspective based on experience.