Big Data
Aaron Fulk
Associate Director of College Counseling
Collegiate School
Big data. We hear about this new phenomenon constantly and how it will change a variety of industries. Personally, I find this phenomenon frustrating on our side of the desk. Despite more information available to us and our students, data does not make this process any less anxiety-inducing or more predictable. No admission dean has shared with me the predictive yield of segmented populations despite my tempting offer of free hugs. Weird.
With that said, this frustration around data is also one of the few reasons college counselors won't be replaced by robots in the next decade. So we've got that going for us . . . which is nice. With all that in mind, here are a few trends and highlights I've noticed from the most recent admissions cycle.
DISCLAIMERS
I feel obligated to point out the obvious about ACCIS: we all work at private institutions with predominantly affluent students. As a result, I am focusing on some of the most selective colleges in the nation, but these colleges and trends are not indicative of higher education at large. Also despite wearing glasses, I am neither an economist nor a mathematician. These are simply personal theories and interpretations of data available to the public.
THE MATTHEW MCCONAUGHEYS CIRCA 2012
In other words, the colleges that are, as the kids say these days, on fleek: