CHOOSING ‘ELITE’ SCHOOL STILL SMART MOVE
Colorado Springs Gazette, 11-1-07
It’s not often I take issue with Thomas
Sowell. A senior scholar at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, a world-class
economist and a prolific author, he’s forgotten more about public policy then
I’ll ever know. He gets things right every time. Until last week.
Last Thursday, in this very spot, he implied “prestigious”
colleges were a waste of time and money.
I beg to differ.
I actually know something about selective
schools. My daughter has applied to
one. My son is pursuing a joint program
at two. I was denied admission at three
(heartbreak), and I’ve been a student or on faculty at four (pure joy). Whether I like it or not, my biggest
disappointments and greatest successes have been connected with elite
institutions of higher education.
For purposes of discussion, let’s agree that
the schools we’re talking about are those that accept a third or fewer of their
applicants. There are maybe two dozen of
them in America, depending on whom you talk to. Colorado Springs has the only one in the
Midwest. It’s a military academy on the
north side of town, maybe you’ve heard of it.
Most people don’t know how unusual these
schools are, because the huge majority of American colleges accept all or nearly
all of their applicants. So let’s be
absolutely clear: This discussion is not
about getting into college. Everybody
gets into college.
But the facts show that the twenty-five most
selective schools in America attract a disproportionate number of America’s
best students. They also charge the most
money. Room and board at one of these
schools will run you about 45 grand a year.
Professor Sowell is right to ask if it’s worth it.
Sowell complains that elite schools get
prestige from research, and that undergraduate education is the neglected
stepchild. To hear Sowell tell it,
you’ll pay thousands of dollars in tuition only to be taught by graduate
students. Not so.
Responding to critics like Sowell, elite
institutions are focusing more and more on undergraduate education. I’m reading a book by Mark Hauser, a Harvard
professor who’s won awards for excellence in teaching. Stephen J. Gould, his former colleague and
arguably the most eminent biologist of his day, always taught
undergraduates. Closer to home, my son is
well into his sophomore year and has yet to take a class taught by a graduate
student. I don’t think his school has
any.
Even back in the Dark Ages, all my classes
were taught by professors. We were
particularly proud of our physics Nobel Laureate who always taught freshmen. Today, the school is raising money to hire
more faculty and drive undergraduate class size down even further. Go online and see what the average class size
is at any name school you care to pick.
I think you’ll be quite impressed.
The real value of a selective college, however,
is not the faculty, although of course that’s important. The real value comes from the people sitting
next to you. If you are at or near the
top of your class, and you earn admission into an elite school, you will,
perhaps for the first time, engage with students who are smarter than you. That is really, really important.
Yes, the odds are long, less than 10% in some
cases, even if you’ve pegged the meter on the SAT and have straight A’s. And yes, it is expensive. The best schools, however, are now rich
enough to offer need-blind admission.
Once you’re in, they want you, and will work with Mom and Dad to make it
happen.
Don’t “shotgun” your application by picking a
bunch of big-name schools and hoping for the best. Focus your college search by finding one or
two “reach” schools that appeal to you.
If you can, pay them a visit.
Talk to an alumnus or alumna.
Yes, you will risk disappointment. That’s how you know you’re reaching for
something worthwhile. Nor can you achieve
the extraordinary if you do not aspire to it.
A world-class education stays with you forever. It is a
life-transforming experience, an investment my parents made in me and that I am
grateful to be able to make in my children.
So if you’re a high school senior, talk to your parents. Perhaps they feel the same way.
Then go for it.