It’s that time of year again. Spring pollen and college rejection letters are making lots of folks around here feel miserable.
“Gone to find God’s greater purpose” was what one high school senior Tweeted when he got rejected from Princeton. Since when did being denied admission to the Ivy League become fodder for an existential crisis?
Gaining entrance to one of the top-ranked, elite institutions is like winning a place on the Olympic team. They’re both extremely long shots, even with the most single-minded dedication and drive. And here in the DC metro area, which lays claim to the most highly educated population in the country, it’s sometimes hard to know who has more at stake, the teens or their parents. Many mothers and fathers who’ve made it to the top of their own careers treat parenting as one more arena where besting the competition means success. The gold medal is a decal from Ivy U. on the rear window of the Prius.
Yes, the university admissions process has gotten wildly out of hand. I’ve seen up close the damage caused by intense parental expectations—college dropouts who had great promise but couldn’t handle the pressure, high school valedictorians who swallowed bottles of Tylenol rather than face telling their parents about failing grades, former premeds who cut off all contact with their families because the weight of unfulfilled expectations were too much for them to bear. True, most young adults don’t buckle under the strain in quite such dramatic ways. But far too many have trouble maintaining their emotional equanimity and motivation after they leave home. College retention rates (only about 55% of students entering four-year undergraduate programs actually stay in school and earn their degrees in four years) testify to this disturbing trend.
A college counselor once shared with me his advice for making a student an attractive candidate for a selective university: “Be pointy.” He tells his clients to develop a talent that makes them stick out and then build the ever-important college resume around it. Having too many varied interests can seem dilettantish, which the consultant would say isn’t a sound marketing strategy in today’s hyper-competitive climate.
As a result, kids can’t just be kids these days. Those who show athletic promise are playing on travel teams before they’re out of elementary school. Their musical counterparts are competing for coveted seats in youth orchestras. Even the class clowns are refining their talents in summer theater camps with an eye on creating a compelling college admissions package.
In response to the push for teenagers to brand themselves as specialists, middle and high schools have created “signature” programs in the humanities, arts, science, and technology. While concentrating on one area of study may appeal to the highly directed student, pressures to choose a career path by the end of fifth or, at the latest, eighth grade may discourage the youngster with less defined goals from sampling a broad range of electives. I’ve known many kids who’ve enrolled in specialty programs not because they have a clear direction, but because they’re afraid if they don’t sign up, they’ll appear unfocused, unmotivated, or just plain uninteresting when they apply to college. And when they finally get there, they worry about their lack of passion in their chosen area of concentration.
It’s no wonder. Pursuing the carrot at the end of the stick is an example of “extrinsic motivation”—doing something for a tangible reward rather than for the pure pleasure of just doing it. Research has shown that this type of incentive isn’t as lasting as the internal, or “intrinsic,” kind. If you take away an extrinsic payoff propelling a desired behavior, the urge to continue working at it often dissipates.
Too often, kids who are engaging in activities primarily to amass accolades for the college resume develop a “What’s in it for me?” attitude at the expense of true intellectual curiosity. One young acquaintance of mine, a highly gifted student who devoted a senior-year biology internship to a biomedical research project that won him a prestigious award in a national science competition, has no plans to continue his scientific pursuits at the Ivy League school he’ll be attending next year. He doesn’t even take particular pride in his accomplishment, dismissing it as something he did just because “ it looked good for college.”
So pushing children to specialize at ever earlier ages can erode self-direction and lead to burnout. About seventy-five percent of college students experience uncertainty about their occupational goals at some point during their undergraduate education. Nearly half switch majors at least once. Shouldn’t we be encouraging adolescents to explore a variety of interests—to dabble, even—during high school, when their brains are still developing and their personalities still forming?
We’re asking too much of our kids. Few of us, even if we’re successful, ever achieve true celebrity status. Yet we expect the high school equivalent of superstardom from our progeny. It’s time to step back and get some perspective on the process of raising a competent adult. College admission is only a first step on the way to maturity and a fulfilling life, not the end of the road. And, hard as it may be to believe for all the high school seniors (and their parents) whose hopes have been dashed this month, a rejection from Harvard or Penn isn’t the end of the world, either.
I just read another article about what high school students are doing–with the help of their parents and high-end, private admissions consultants–to market themselves to colleges. [Eye roll]
One eighteen-year-old heading to Yale in the fall turned himself into an old China hand by studying Mandarin on native soil after his sophomore year and returning to the country the following summer for an internship. He drew on his experiences to craft an application essay about “calmly sipping green tea” in the mountains of Nanjing. Come on. Do deans of admission really buy this stuff?
I’m not knocking the kid. He developed a business plan to get into an Ivy League school with the guidance of a consulting firm called Everything Summer—and it worked. The company suggests trips to help teens “augment who they are and discover who they are” with a laser eye on the competitive admissions process. Anxious parents are flocking in droves to companies like this, hoping to unlock the secret of success for their children.
Heck, I was an anxious parent once, too, though never anxious enough to pay for college admissions advice. I was perfectly capable of coming up with my own hare-brained ideas. Like the plan I concocted for my artistic daughter to turn her talent for custom-painting old jeans into a business to highlight her entrepreneurial skills. Never mind that she doesn’t have an entrepreneurial bone in her body. We created a company to beef up her college application and even talked about it on TV in a local news segment about college admissions stress.
Contrast the resumes designed by the consultants cashing in on the collective panic about college admissions with the real-life experience one DC businessman is offering students. He hires young people to run his frozen yoghurt stores. Their on-the-job training teaches them business skills. And, for many who don’t have families who can afford to send them to China for the summer let alone pay for tuition, it helps them earn enough money to put themselves through school.
My daughter’s “business” folded. She only sold two pairs of jeans. And, anyway, the acceptance letter was already in hand. Today she holds many academic honors and a liberal arts diploma from a prestigious university. But she’s having trouble finding a job. Her high school venture isn’t on her resume.
Leave it to the social scientists to prove the obvious. According to a headline in the Washington Post, “Surveys find that the vacation glow vanishes once we return to everyday life.”
This is no news to me. Having returned just a few weeks ago from a restorative trip to the high desert of New Mexico, I can affirm that the inner calm I felt in the mountains faded even more quickly than my tan as soon as I returned to sea level. Still, it’s nice to have hard data to validate personal experience.
In separate studies conducted in the Netherlands and in Australia (where—get out your tiny violins– the researcher studied vacationers on the Great Barrier Reef), the academics found that the first few days of a trip can cause aches, pains, and general malaise—symptoms of “leisure sickness”–in work-addicted professionals who can’t relax. After a few days, most people feel much better, and by the end of the vacation, they’re really into the groove.
Then comes the crash. Back to the old routine and in less than a week . . . poof! It’s like the getaway never happened.
I’ve spent a lot of time in the last few weeks contemplating this phenomenon because I want to recapture that vacation state of mind. And I think it’s possible. I’ll tell you how later.