Pandemic upends admissions process
Students facing atypical college application season
In this atypical college application season, high school students and college recruiters are scrambling to showcase their best qualities in the annual courtship process.
Many seniors are filling out applications without ACT and SAT scores, community service hours or extracurricular activities — all canceled during the coronavirus pandemic.
Colleges in turn have produced virtual campus tours, hosted Zoom interviews and loosened requirements for standardized tests. At Washington University in St. Louis, potential students can send in videos to introduce themselves, in effect auditioning for the role of freshman.
The more creative admissions process means students are no longer judged only by their test scores or grade-point averages, a trend that could become permanent, said Shaun Ramsay, vice president of consulting firm ArtsBridge.
“What the pandemic did for better or worse was force colleges to evaluate applicants in other ways,” he said.
Every student has seen their high school careers affected by the pandemic, from the challenges of virtual learning to a parent’s job loss or death of a family member. Nearly all have missed out on prom, graduation and other traditions.
Sensing that every college essay could be centered around the coronavirus, administrators of the Common App added an optional 250-word question about the pandemic.
“Community disruptions such as COVID-19 and natural disasters can have deep and long-lasting impacts. If you need it, this space is yours to describe those impacts. Colleges care about the effects on your health and well-being, safety, family circumstances, future plans, and education, including access to reliable technology and quiet study spaces,” reads the essay prompt on the standard application accepted by
900 colleges worldwide.
College recruiters, already facing years of downward enrollment trends, have been eager to work with applicants who are nervous about their abbreviated credentials. Colleges receive reports on each high school their applicants attend, so they know if a school moved to a pass/fail grading system, dropped AP courses or made other changes during the pandemic.
“We are fully aware of the things they’ve had to endure while they’ve been in high school, and we’re prepared for them,” said Michelle Rogers, program director for regional recruitment at St. Louis University.
The move to virtual recruiting has allowed
colleges to reach students they otherwise might have missed. In one day last fall, Rogers virtually visited three high schools in Illinois and two high schools in Hawaii.
That access, along with the elimination of standardized test requirements, has led to record high numbers of applicants to highly selective colleges. Some Ivy League schools have pushed back their decision dates to April to allow more time to review applications.
Colleges had been moving away from standardized tests even pre-pandemic over concerns of fairness. But the pandemic accelerated the trend, with now more than 1,600 colleges eliminating the test requirement
or making it optional. In January, the College Board announced it would stop offering the essay portion and subject matter tests of the SAT, which it administers.
“People took the opportunity to not submit test scores and that’s a really beautiful thing,” said Nerinx Hall senior Megan Boyll. “I think we’ll get a lot more diverse perspectives at really selective institutions.”
Megan applied to 20 colleges after first focusing on economics programs and then switching to schools with civil engineering majors. She has only visited a couple campuses on her list since a spring break trip to the East Coast was canceled last year.
“It probably would have helped whittle it down,” Megan said of the trip. “I also think if it would have been a normal senior year, I would have been a little bit busier and I probably would have applied to fewer schools.”
Virtual campus tours and information sessions have been an equalizer during the pandemic, said Patti Miller, a counselor with Collegewise, a California-based admissions consulting company.
“One of the things that’s been interesting, leaning into the idea of holistic admissions, is colleges are really interested in how students have spent their time during the pandemic,” she said.
Emaline Edson, a senior at Collegiate School of
Medicine and Bioscience in St. Louis, has practiced her baking skills, crafting pastries, bread and birthday cakes for family members.
“The last year they should have been out with their friends, spending less time at home living their best senior life. Nobody is more boring than this year’s senior class,” said her mom, Colette Edson.
But after years of focusing on test scores and GPA, the family’s perspective on college has changed during the pandemic, Edson said.
“None of that matters nearly as much as her feeling safe, having a high quality of life, not feeling overwhelmed and making connections with all sorts of people,” she said.
PARIS — From her bulletproof case in the Louvre Museum, Mona Lisa’s smile met an unfamiliar sight the other morning: emptiness. The gallery where throngs of visitors swarmed to ogle her day after day was a void, deserted under France’s latest coronavirus confinement.
Around the corner, the Winged Victory of Samothrace floated quietly above a marble staircase, majestic in the absence of selfie-sticks and tour groups. In the Louvre’s medieval basement, the Great Sphinx of Tanis loomed in the dark like a granite ghost from behind bars.
Yet out of the rare and monumental stillness, sounds of life were stirring in the Louvre’s great halls.
The rat-a-tat of a jackhammer echoed from a ceiling above the Sphinx’s head. Rap music thumped from the Bronze Room under Cy Twombly’s ceiling in the Sully Wing, near where workers were sawing parquet for a giant new floor. In Louis XIV’s former apartments, restorers in surgical masks climbed scaffolding to tamp gold leaf onto ornate moldings.
The world’s most visited museum — nearly 10 million in 2019, mostly from overseas — is grappling with its longest closure since World War II, as pandemic restrictions keep its treasures under lock and key. But without crowds that can swell to as many as 40,000 people a day, museum officials are seizing a golden opportunity to finesse a grand refurbishment for when visitors return.
“For some projects, the lockdown has allowed us to do in five days what would have previously taken five weeks,” said Sébastien Allard, general curator and director of the Louvre’s paintings department.
Louvre lovers have had to settle for seeing masterpieces during the pandemic through virtual tours and the hashtags #LouvreChezVous and @MuseeLouvre. Millions of viewers got a spectacular fix this month from the Netflix hit series “Lupin,” in which actor Omar Sy, playing a gentleman thief, stars in action-filled scenes in the Louvre’s best-known galleries .
But virtual reality can hardly replace the real thing. Louvre officials are hoping the government will reopen cultural institutions to the public soon.
In the meantime, a small army of around 250 artisans has been working since France’s latest lockdown went into effect Oct. 30. Instead of waiting until Tuesdays — the sole day that the Louvre used to close — curators, restorers, conservators and other experts are pressing ahead five days a week to complete major renovations that had started before the pandemic and introduce new beautifications that they hope to finish by mid-February.
Some of the work is relatively simple, like dusting the frames of nearly 4,500 paintings. Some is herculean, like makeovers in the Egyptian antiquities hall and the Sully Wing. Nearly 40,000 explanatory plaques in English and French are being hung next to art works.
Even before the pandemic, the Louvre was taking a hard look at crowd management because mass tourism had meant many galleries were choked with tour groups. While travel restrictions have slashed the number of visitors, the museum will limit entry to ticket holders with reservations when it reopens to meet health protocols.
Other changes are planned — such as new interactive experiences, including yoga sessions every half-hour on Wednesdays near JacquesLouis David and Peter Paul Rubens masterpieces, and workshops in which actors play scenes from famous tableaux right in front of the canvas.
“It’s a callout to say the museum is living and that people have the right to do these things here,” said Marina-Pia Vitali, a deputy director of interpretation who oversees the projects.
When I walked the halls on a recent visit, I felt a thrill upon seeing the Venus de Milo rise from her pedestal — minus the glow of iPhones — and admired, at leisure, the drape of sheer fabric chiseled from unblemished marble.
In the cavernous Red Room — home to monumental French paintings including the coronation of Napoleon as emperor in Notre Dame, and the Raft of the Medusa, depicting gray-skinned souls just clinging to life — it felt uplifting not to be swept along by throngs.
The pandemic also has wreaked havoc with planning for special exhibits. The Louvre lends around 400 works a year to other museums and receives numerous loans for shows.
“It’s really complicated because all museums in the world are in the process of changing their planning,” Allard said.
As governments order new restrictions to contain a resurgence of the virus, special shows are being pushed back. A loan reserved for exhibits at several museums may get caught in confinements, making it tricky to deliver the promised artwork, he said.
Nearby, workers climbed a rolling scaffold to remove an enormous Anthony van Dyck painting of Venus asking Vulcan for arms. Destined for an exhibit in Madrid, the painting was whisked through the Dutch halls, past Johannes Vermeer’s Astronomer studying an astrolabe, before getting stuck in front of a small doorway.
The workers turned the painting on its side and slid it on pillows to the next gallery, where it would go on to be packaged and — pandemic restrictions permitting — sent on its way.
“COVID has been a force majeure,” said Allard, as a duo of Dutch paintings were hoisted to replace the van Dyck. “At the moment we have so many question marks — it’s hard to know what the situation will be in two, three or four months,” he said.
“But despite COVID, we continue to work as always,” Allard continued. “We must be ready to welcome back the public.”