Last
week I stumbled upon an interesting conversation in a website devoted to sports
and culture. Why has there never been a
great television series, either drama or comedy, about college? There have been good shows about high school
(Mr. Novak, Room 222, My So-Called Life,
Freaks and Geeks, Friday Night Lights) and about law
school (The Paper Chase) and medical
residency (St. Elsewhere, ER), but nothing memorable (or at least
that I remember) about college itself.
The consensus in the discussion was that high school offers more character
archetypes, and that it is too hard to show the balance of serious study and
social silliness that are intertwined in most people’s college experience.
That
evening I saw an ad for an upcoming movie starring Tina Fey as an admissions
officer at Princeton. The two experiences
on the same day triggered memories of a more innocent time, regrets about
opportunities lost, and another reminder of why I ended up in a non-profit
career.
Thirty
years ago I had an idea for what I still think could have been the classic show
about college. The twist is that it
would be a workplace ensemble sitcom along the lines of Cheers, only set in the Admissions Office of a small liberal-arts
college. The admissions setting provided
an interesting intersection between academia and the “real world,” the main
character would have been (like me) a recent grad navigating between being a
student and being an adult, and the pilot episode would have featured a
celebrity visiting the college with his or her child. Like most of my great ideas, it didn’t pan
out, but I thought there was lots of humor to be found in all aspects of
college admissions.
I’m
hoping that same recognition, that the admissions world offers a treasure trove
of laughs, is what led a University of Pennsylvania admissions officer to share
and mock excerpts from applicants’ essays on her personal Facebook page. I’m hoping it’s a feeble attempt at humor
rather than meanness and condescension.
The former is a serious lapse in judgment; the latter, a character flaw.
There
is little to add regarding the infraction itself. Under no circumstances is it appropriate for
an admissions professional to share information from an application outside the
office. It is both invasion of privacy
and theft of intellectual property.
The
larger, more interesting, question is whether admissions officers understand
and empathize with the young people whose lives they are judging and impacting. A number of years ago, an Admissions Dean
friend of mine vented that she would scream if she read another essay about the
“three D’s”—death, drugs, and divorce.
(Not long after a fourth “D” was added—the DaVinci Code.) I understood her sentiments, but told her
that she was being unfair. For teenagers
with limited life experience and who experience emotions more intensely than at
any other point in life (which is why first love is so powerful), any of those
D’s is traumatic and life-changing. Do
admissions officers understand what it’s like to be in high school?
I
suspect the “empathy gap” is more pronounced in young admissions officers. I don’t know if that’s a developmental issue
or a training issue, but I have talked with a number of secondary counselors
who comment that young admissions officers today are too busy giving their
admissions presentation to engage in conversation and see applicants as numbers
rather than as human beings. It might be
especially pronounced in young admissions officers working at their alma maters. It wasn’t until leaving admissions that I
realized the school I was marketing was an idealized version of the actual
institution. I wasn’t trying to be
misleading or unethical, but I was a true believer, and I knew that attracting
good students was one way to make the college better.
I
also think the “empathy gap” is more prevalent at highly selective institutions
like Penn. When you deal with thousands
of applicants, almost all of whom have superb credentials, it is easy to become
spoiled and lose sight of the fact that teenagers are “works in progress,”
going through an odyssey of self-discovery.
The application process is a snapshot of an individual’s accomplishments,
growth, and potential, and the picture that is most complex and interesting may
not be the one that initially catches your eye.
At its worst the highly-selective admissions process looks to admit
alumni who are already successful rather than students who will grow most from
the college experience.
Thirty
years ago, my boss, the Admissions Dean, talked about teaming up and becoming
comedy writers. He realized even then
where the admissions profession might be heading, that writing comedy might be
both a more fun and more sane way to make a living than trying to fill a
freshman class. I’m happy with how
things played out. As much as I like the cheap laugh (which I rarely ever get),
watching young people grow up and figure out who they are meant to be is far more
satisfying.