300多美国本科院长谈疫情期间的申请

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昨天《华盛顿邮报》登载了包括哈佛、耶鲁、布朗等300多个美国大学本科院长签署的一个文件, 沟通在新冠病毒期间, 他们对大学申请的一些看法。有兴趣研究英文原文的,可以在下文里详细看。

其实全文并没有新的东西, 但有一句话我想需要单独拿出来强调一下, 那就是:“我们不希望看到大家做公益方面的竞赛。我们需要看到 “发自内心的,真诚的, 对你的成长有意义的服务”。这些服务可以是很不起眼, 很小的事情, 比如给前线的医护人员和警察写感谢信。“我们还将成就放在学生如何克服困难的背景下来看。”

这封信, 其实只要理解了“全人录取”原则, 理解了品格比成就重要, 做大事不如从做小事开始, 以及任何成就必须在学生有多少资源的背景下来看这些原则, 就很好理解了。

为了先睹为快, 我们简单介绍一下这些本科院长看重什么, 不看重什么:

1)照顾好自己, 对自己温柔一些。

2)学习压力: 病毒期间, 远程学习, 有些学生可能不一定适应, 有些考试没有办法考,大学理解, 我们更看重你在病毒前后的成绩。 

3)服务他人: 不要搞“服务竞赛”, 我们看重你真诚的服务他人, 并在这个过程中获得成长, 寻找意义。

4)做家务: 很多人追求高大上的义工和公益, 却忽视了对自己身边, 对家庭贡献的意义。你如果照顾家庭里生病的人, 如果为了贴补家用而打工, 这些我们都非常看重,不要小看这些活动的意义。

5)暑期活动:如果疫情期间, 你没有暑期活动, 你不会处于劣势。我们理解很多活动被取消, 没有办法开展, 无需焦虑。

华盛顿邮报英文原文: 

More than 300 college deans explain what they want — and don’t want — to see from applicants in the covid-19 era

 

By 

Valerie Strauss 

Reporter

June 29, 2020 at 8:01 a.m. EDT

(Updating with new number of deans)

With the coronavirus pandemic upending everything about going to college, more than 300 admissions deans from schools around the country just released a statement about what they want to see in applicants for fall 2021 — and what they don’t want to see.

The statement, released Monday by the Making Caring Common project at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, tells students what deans value in applicants. It is also an effort to relieve stress on families, according to Richard Weissbourd, a senior lecturer at Harvard University and faculty director of Making Caring Common. (You can read the full statement below with names of the signatories.)

The deans offer guidance on self-care and academic work, as well as advice on family contributions, service and extracurricular and summer activities.

 

This effort comes at a highly unusual time for colleges and universities. They are about to embark on unprecedented experiments welcoming to students to campus during a pandemic disease. Most have waived the requirement to include an ACT or SAT admissions score on freshman applications. According to the nonprofit National Center for Fair and Open Testing, more than half of four-year colleges and universities have waived the requirement for 2021, and many have done it as permanent policy.

It looks like the beginning of the end of America’s obsession with student standardized tests

College officials have long talked about their holistic admissions practices, but the fact is that test scores have played a large role in many admissions decisions and can even determine where a student decides to apply. For next year, test scores won’t be a factor.

So what do the admissions officials say they want and don’t want?

 

 

Here’s an example: “We, emphatically, do not seek to create a competitive public service ‘Olympics’ in response to this pandemic. What matters to us is whether students’ contribution or service isauthentic and meaningful to them and to others, whether that contribution is writing regular notes to frontline workers or checking in with neighbors who are isolated. We will assess these contributions and service in the context of the obstacles students are facing.”

Weissbourd leads Turning the Tide, a national effort to reform college admissions to increase equity, cut down on pressure to achieve in high school and promote ethical engagement. The statement as of June 29, 2020, signed by more than 300 college deans, including from some of the most prestigious institutions in the country, comes out of Turning the Tide.

Here’s the text of the statement, along with the initial list of about 165 endorsers:

 

 

What We Care about in this Time of Crisis: A Collective Statement from College Admission Deans

As admission and enrollment leaders, we recognize that we and the institutions we represent send signals that can shape students’ priorities and experiences throughout high school. This collective statement seeks to clarify what we value in applicants during this time of COVID-19. We are keenly aware that students across the country and the world are experiencing many uncertainties and challenges. We primarily wish to underscore our commitment to equity, and to encourage in students self-care, balance, meaningful learning, and care for others.


More specifically, we value the following:


1. Self-care

Self-care is of high importance, especially in times of crisis. We recognize that many students, economically struggling and facing losses and hardships of many kinds, are simply seeking to get by. We also recognize that this time is stressful and demanding for a wide range of students for many different reasons. We encourage all students to be gentle with themselves during this time.


2. Academic work

Your academic engagement and work during this time matters to us, but given the circumstances of many families, we recognize that many of you face obstacles to academic work. We will assess your academic achievements in the context of these obstacles. In addition, we will assess your academic achievements mainly based on your academic performance before and after this pandemic. No student will be disadvantaged because of a change in commitments or a change in plans because of this outbreak, their school’s decisions about transcripts, the absence of AP or IB tests, their lack of access to standardized tests (although many of the colleges represented here don’t require these tests) or their inability to visit campus. We will also view students in the context of the curriculum, academic resources, and supports available to them.


3. Service and contributions to others.

We value contributions to one’s communities for those who are in a position to provide these contributions. We recognize that while many students are not in this position because of stresses and demands, other students are looking for opportunities to be engaged and make a difference. This pandemic has created a huge array of needs, whether for tutoring, contact tracing, support for senior citizens, or assistance with food delivery. We view responding to these needs as one valuable way that students can spend their time during this pandemic.


We also value forms of contribution that are unrelated to this pandemic, such as working to register voters, protect the environment, combat racial injustice and inequities or stop online harassment among peers. Our interest is not in whether students created a new project or demonstrated leadership during this period. We, emphatically, do not seek to create a competitive public service “Olympics” in response to this pandemic. What matters to us is whether students’ contribution or service is authentic and meaningful to them and to others, whether that contribution is writing regular notes to frontline workers or checking in with neighbors who are isolated. We will assess these contributions and service in the context of the obstacles students are facing. We also care about what students have learned from their contributions to others about themselves, their communities, and/or their country (Please see Turning the Tide for additional information about the kinds of contributions and service we value). No student will be disadvantaged during this time who is not in a position to provide these contributions. We will review these students for admissions in terms of other aspects of their applications.


4. Family contributions.

Far too often there is a misperception that high-profile, brief forms of service tend to “count” in admissions while family contributions—which are often deeper and more time-consuming and demanding—do not. Many students may be supervising younger siblings, for example, or caring for sick relatives or working to provide family income, and we recognize that these responsibilities may have increased during these times. We view substantial family contributions as very important, and we encourage students to report them in their applications. It will only positively impact the review of their application.


5. Extracurricular and summer activities.

No student will be disadvantaged for not engaging in extracurricular activities during this time. We also understand that many plans for summer have been impacted by this pandemic and students will not be disadvantaged for lost possibilities for involvement. Potential internship opportunities, summer jobs, camp experiences, classes, and other types of meaningful engagement have been cancelled or altered. We have never had specific expectations for any one type of extracurricular activities or summer experience and realize that each student’s circumstances allow for different opportunities. We have always considered work or family responsibilities as valuable ways of spending one’s time, and this is especially true at this time.


Reporting information that is important to students and to us. We will gather information from schools themselves about curriculum and academic resources and supports, but encourage students to communicate any factors specific to their circumstances that impeded their academic performance. Those factors might include, for example, lack of access to the internet, no quiet place to study, or the various family responsibilities described above. We encourage students to describe concretely how any of these circumstances have negatively affected their academic performance or ability to engage in activities that matter to them. It is helpful to know, for example, how much time students spent per week taking on a family responsibility, such as taking care of a sick relative. This information will be treated completely confidentially.


Both the Common Application and the Coalition for College application provide opportunities for students to describe how they have been impacted by the pandemic.

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