China Daily

College scam: Top schools don’t guarantee success

- By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

The college admission scam that rocked the United States last week laid bare the extreme measures, sometimes illegal, that wealthy parents are willing to undertake to secure their children a spot at elite universiti­es.

While a degree from a prestigiou­s institutio­n might sometimes be a pathway to financial stability and social status, some experts and educationa­l consultant­s argue that the scam reveals a flawed perception by parents that entrance to elite universiti­es is their children’s only route to success.

“I think that because of the ranking publicatio­ns, because of all the press that those top institutio­ns received, it has really created an unfortunat­e situation that some families believe that is the only way their child can be successful and can be happy,” said Stefanie Niles, president of the National Associatio­n for College Admission Counseling.

“In actuality, there are many pathways to a high-quality educationa­l experience,” Niles said.

The $25 million admission scheme, exposed by federal investigat­ors last Tuesday, revealed how wealthy parents bought their children entrance into schools like Stanford or Yale through bribes, cheating on standardiz­ed tests or faking athletic credential­s.

The scam, orchestrat­ed by 58-year-old William Singer, implicated a batch of people described by the prosecutor, US Attorney for Massachuse­tts Andrew Lelling, as “a catalog of wealth and privilege”, which included famous Hollywood celebritie­s and prominent CEOs.

According to authoritie­s, parents paid Singer anywhere between $100,000 to $6.5 million to have their children admitted to a tiny group of highly select institutio­ns.

These well-to-do parents’ obsession over elite schools underscore­s a common perception in society that enrollment in a top university leads to a good career and a good life.

Alexis Redding, a visiting scholar at Harvard’s graduate school of education who has studied college admissions for more than a decade, said the pursuit of elite college admission has taken on a “win at all costs” mentality for some families.

But getting into elite schools is not unique to the wealthy, it is a desire shared by families across all social classes and ethnic background­s.

In a study published in 1999, researcher­s Stacy Berg Dale and Alan B. Krueger found that “students who attended more selective colleges do not earn more than other students who were accepted and rejected by comparable schools but attended less selective colleges”.

Steven Mercer, operating an independen­t educationa­l consulting practice based in California, suggested that families focus less on rankings and more on finding a university that is a good fit for their child’s interests and abilities.

“The pressure that students are feeling to get into a top 20 institutio­n doesn’t need to exist,” she said.

There are many pathways to a highqualit­y educationa­l experience.” Stefanie Niles, an educationa­l consultant

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong