USA TODAY US Edition

Is AI going to decide if you get into college?

Algorithms are helping to narrow the field

- Edward C. Baig

It’s crunch time for college applicatio­ns, and hopeful high school seniors are working hard to impress admissions committees to land a spot at the school of their choice.

But what if that committee wasn’t a committee of people. What if, instead, you had to impress a robot – or win over an artificial intelligen­ce-driven algorithm?

You did everything you could to package your applicatio­n to highlight just the right combinatio­n of grades, extracurri­culars and eye-catching essays the counselor at your high school said the admissions committees at your target schools were looking for. Was it all a big waste of time?

Relax, the robots aren’t coming for college admissions quite yet. Real people still will be deciding on applicants for quite some time, and in all likelihood always will have the final say on admissions.

Yet, just as artificial intelligen­ce is in the relatively early stages of impacting practicall­y every business, AI will almost certainly assume a bigger role across college campuses, too, and perhaps help university staffers decide whether you ultimately make the cut.

Managing the numbers game

Schools have to play the dicey and expensive numbers game: How many offer letters can they send and still meet the desired size for the incoming

class? They know their desired enrollment, then have to figure out how many acceptance letters they have to put, knowing many of their choice applicants have other offer letters to consider. So how does the institutio­n determine who gets those offers?

“You would be naïve to think they’re not using some algorithmi­c approach today” at some of the biggest schools, says Alex Terry, the CEO of Conversica, which produces “conversati­onal” AI business solutions, including an AIpowered admissions assistant for higher education. “When you have 40,000 or

100,000 applicants to your school, that’s just a large informatio­n technology task.”

And in fact, AI is well-suited to tackle this very issue. Brian Knotts is chief architect and senior vice president of research at Ellucian, a Reston, Virginia, provider of software and services designed for higher education. He says AI can help the schools “predict the kinds of things that caused that success or failure to matriculat­e” by grouping data characteri­stics that show why some students graduate, while others drop out.

Of course, he says, it’s important for any university that is relying at least partly on an algorithmi­c approach to build systems that avoid bias.

Students and other advisers can “review what these algorithms are doing and then create some core concepts that are going to say, like, ‘ a computer will never reject an applicant for admission,’ ‘a computer will help determinat­ion with a human your viability of being admitted.’ ”

Even while proceeding cautiously, university officials across the country are considerin­g ways AI can help them manage the admissions challenges.

While University of Texas at Austin isn’t currently using or planning to use AI in its admissions process, UT’s executive director of admissions Miguel Wasielewsk­i told USA TODAY in an emailed statement that AI could become a useful tool. He wrote that, in conjunctio­n with a robust “holistic review,” AI “could have potential to reveal additional perspectiv­es that might inform the admissions review process and ... could support some of our practices around determinin­g, based on a student’s applicatio­n materials, what student success interventi­ons might be important for timely graduation.”

That holistic review, Wasielewsk­i makes clear, is still a “human endeavor,” and it is people, not machines, who will pore through an applicant’s written responses to essay and short answer questions, transcript­s, test scores and letters of recommenda­tion.

“We’ve definitely been looking at AI as part of our continuing student process and be able to provide them with

24-7 support in a way we cannot always do now,” said Kasey Urquidez, the vice president of enrollment management and dean of undergradu­ate admissions at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

Urquidez also has no plans to let a machine dismiss an applicant out of hand. “I would never want to have a de- cision fully made without one of my team members, who are trained and understand what students need to have in order to be successful, to do any final reviews,” she says.

University of Arizona typically gets about 35,000 freshmen applicatio­ns for about 7,800 openings. And state applicants who have a 3.0 grade point average and have taken the requisite coursework in high school are assured admission to one of three state universiti­es.

For other applicants at Arizona or elsewhere, Urquidez can envision situations where computers might someday surface overlooked or borderline applicants who may have something in their background­s to indicate a chance at college success. Maybe a student’s overall GPA comes up a bit short, but those grades have been on an upward trajectory.

“We always talk about being the office of admission, not necessaril­y the office of denial, so we’re trying to figure out ways that a student could be admissible,” Urquidez says. “And the biggest thing is, are they going to be successful here?”

Achieving that goal of admitting students with the highest chance of success is a sizable undertakin­g. For a university the size of Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Oral Roberts University with its 4,000 students on campus and nearly 2,500 online, ORU chief informatio­n officer Michael Mathews says that can mean, for any school of its size, wading through anywhere from 20,000 to 40,000 applicants.

“How do we take the amount of resources that we have from a human capital perspectiv­e and spend the most time on those (applicants) who are a good fit, want to be (here), have the financial capability?” he asks. “That’s where augmented intelligen­ce will help out tremendous­ly. ... I don’t think artificial intelligen­ce is going to spit out all these automatic responses and here’s your list. I see it as a recommenda­tion based on informatio­n, but you still have the human ability to validate what it’s telling you.”

It’s not immediatel­y obvious how, or even if, the use of AI during the admissions process will alter the way you go about applying to a school – as always, grades, test scores and all the other usual criteria still count most. But AI solutions might eventually help applicants narrow down choices of prospectiv­e schools, and – yes, this is sure to raise ethical concerns – maybe even help craft applicatio­n essays.

Georgia State University in Atlanta began using an AI chatbot system called Pounce, not to decide which applicants get in, but rather to reduce “student melt,” referring to kids who have been accepted but then never show up for fall enrollment.

For the summer of 2016, Georgia State built up a knowledge base of more than 2,000 text-based answers to questions commonly asked by incoming freshmen, covering everything from completing a federal financial aid form to what do I do if my parents are getting a divorce?

And largely because of the Pounce system, the university reduced summer melt that first year by 22 percent and since then by 37 percent.

 ?? MEG BUSCEMA/GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY ?? Georgia State uses a chatbot system to track acceptance­s.
MEG BUSCEMA/GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY Georgia State uses a chatbot system to track acceptance­s.

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