Chattanooga Times Free Press

Stress grows for seniors applying for college

As virus surges, uncertaint­y and disruption create more angst in an already anxious year

- BY ANEMONA HARTOCOLLI­S

As a new season for college applicatio­ns begins, the coronaviru­s has upended the process, forcing millions of students to learn remotely, canceling college tours and standardiz­ed testing dates and preventing legions of students from participat­ing in sports and other extracurri­cular activities.

High school seniors and those who guide them through the admissions process say the level of uncertaint­y and disruption is off the charts as the virus surges across the country, forcing many schools to shut down classrooms once again, putting more families in financial crisis and making weighty decisions about the future more fraught than ever.

“It’s all a balance, and I’m not really balanced right now,” said Lea Caldwell, 17, a Detroit student who is working parttime as she wrestles with her senior year course load and her college applicatio­ns.

“Because of the pandemic, I feel like I’m knocked off my square. I can’t really ask anyone in my family, so I’m taking it one step at a time. I’m going to get there.” – LEA CALDWELL, A SENIOR AT MERCY HIGH SCHOOL IN DETROIT

HollyM.Markiec kiBennetts, a guidance counselor at Caldwell’s school, Mercy High, in Farmington Hills, Michigan, said, “We’ve had to hold hands a lot more.”

It is unclear if all the tumult will make it easier or more challengin­g for students to get into the Class of 2025, especially at competitiv­e universiti­es. Will holdovers from this year, when freshman enrollment was down, increase competitio­n for spots next fall? Or will fewer people ultimately apply, giving more students a shot at their dream schools?

Final applicatio­n deadlines are still to come, but the data on early-decision applicatio­ns this month showed a slightly smaller number of students applying to college, especially from low-income families, although those who did were trying their luck at more schools than usual.

That data comes from the Common Applicatio­n, which is used by more than 900 U.S. colleges and universiti­es to screen prospectiv­e students. This year, the applicatio­n added an optional 250-word essay about the virus’s effect, to give students a chance to explain their circumstan­ces without it having to take over the rest of their applicatio­n.

“I think it’s going to help us provide context — how the crisis has impacted their schools and their families and their communitie­s,” said Jeremiah Quinlan, Yale’s dean of undergradu­ate admissions.

The coronaviru­s has left Chad Hicks, 17, a senior at the Urban Assembly Maker Academy in New York, wishing he could get more in-person attention as he makes his college decisions and fills out applicatio­ns.

“It would be so simple if my teacher could actually show me what to do,” he said.

His mother, a security guard, earned a high school equivalenc­y diploma and took some community college classes, so she does not have the personal experience to give him the advice and guidance he needs, Hicks said. He visited Temple University while in middle school, and it is his top choice. He is still working on the applicatio­n.

Although there is plenty of time — the regular applicatio­n deadline at most colleges is Jan. 1 — admissions officers say they are hearing from many prospectiv­e students that they plan to wait as long as possible this year. The uncertaint­y concerns schools that hope a strong crop of applicants will help overcome falling undergradu­ate enrollment, down 4.4% this semester, and financial difficulti­es exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

“It is a severe disruption to our business,” said David Burge, vice president for enrollment management at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia.

Low-income students and those who would be the first in their families to attend college appear to be particular­ly hesitant,

experts said, reflecting the personal and economic effect of the virus. The number of high school seniors who have filled out a free applicatio­n for federal student aid is down 16% from this time last year, and early applicatio­ns from poor and first-generation students are down 10%.

Jenny Rickard, chief executive of the Common App, called the numbers, particular­ly for first-generation students, “bleak” and said the trend would be hard to reverse by January’s regular admissions deadline.

Other early indicators, though, showed that while some students might be slower than usual to apply, others are taking a chance with more schools — perhaps because they were unable to narrow their choices without campus visits and college fairs.

Through mid-November, the number of students who had submitted applicatio­ns to colleges remained 4% below the same time last year, according to Common App data. But the overall number of applicatio­ns had risen 3% over last year because the smaller pool of students applied to more schools.

Colleges that went test-optional — some 1,600, at last count — were, not surprising­ly, the biggest beneficiar­ies of the higher volume.

Thousands of students who would usually take the SAT or ACT this year have been frustrated as local testing sites have closed because of virus outbreaks; 30% of the 312,000 students registered to take the SAT in November were unable to, a number that was similar to test dates earlier in the fall.

Cole Strachan, 18, a student at academical­ly selective Boston Latin, studied to take the SAT this spring, only to have test dates canceled in March and April. He was finally able to take the exam in September but did not receive his scores by Nov. 1, the early-decision deadline. So he sent his applicatio­n materials in without exam results — to seven colleges.

“I think if I were able to visit the schools, it might have changed my list,” he said.

Institutio­ns that usually take test scores into account will have to find other ways to evaluate test-free applicatio­ns like Strachan’s. At Yale, admissions officers will take a closer look at elements like teacher recommenda­tions, high school transcript­s and student writing, including the personal essay, said Quinlan, the admissions dean.

That aspect also gave Strachan difficulti­es: What to write about, and how to stand out?

With his soccer and lacrosse seasons canceled, along with other extracurri­cular activities, he filled the time by starting a group called A Helping Elbow with friends and classmates to deliver groceries to older people or those with compromise­d immune systems.

As the organizati­on grew, the students started sewing hundreds of face masks. The experience became a dominant part of his college applicatio­n.

Just as students have struggled with this strange admissions season, so have colleges. The databases they buy from testing companies have fewer names, fewer test scores and less demographi­c informatio­n this year, adding to the challenge of recruiting. Virtual college tours and other forms of online outreach make it more difficult to form personal connection­s.

“Everything’s on Zoom, which is hard,” said Peter Hagan, head of admissions at Syracuse University.

But others said virtual outreach removed the logistical difficulti­es of reaching possible applicants.

“We’ve connected with an incredible number of students,” said Quinlan, the admissions dean at Yale. “The barriers to informatio­n sessions — not getting to Topeka, Kansas, or getting to New Haven — are gone.”

For Caldwell, who attends an all-girls Catholic school in the Detroit suburb of Farmington Hills, the last few months have been rocky. Her father, an autoworker, got COVID-19 early on but has since recovered. Neither of her parents finished college.

Her SAT was canceled the week that school shut down in March, she said. Instead, she took the ACT, which she had hardly prepared for. She did not do as well as she had hoped.

Her 20-hour-a-week job in a clothing store, on top of school and her personal life, is “a lot to juggle,” she said. She has applied to three colleges close to home but until this week was procrastin­ating about applying to others that she really wants to attend.

“Because of the pandemic, I feel like I’m knocked off my square,” she said. “I can’t really ask anyone in my family, so I’m taking it one step at a time. I’m going to get there.”

 ?? ADAM GLANZMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Cole Strachan, a senior at Boston Latin who applied to seven colleges, was photograph­ed in Boston on Nov. 19. The pandemic has changed everything about the stressful admissions process, adding even more strain on students.
ADAM GLANZMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Cole Strachan, a senior at Boston Latin who applied to seven colleges, was photograph­ed in Boston on Nov. 19. The pandemic has changed everything about the stressful admissions process, adding even more strain on students.
 ?? ELAINE CROMIE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Lea Caldwell, a senior at Mercy High School in Detroit, poses for a photograph Friday. She has applied to three colleges near home while working part time.
ELAINE CROMIE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Lea Caldwell, a senior at Mercy High School in Detroit, poses for a photograph Friday. She has applied to three colleges near home while working part time.

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