Wednesday, November 10,
1999
Applying to College Goes Online
By Anick Jesdanun
The Associated Press
NEW YORK -- The ritual of applying for college is going
high-tech. High school students are now heading to the Web to get
information instantly and conveniently.
From the venerable College Board, which runs the SAT college
entrance exams, to upstarts such as BestSchoolsUSA.com, online
research services want to help students pick schools, write essays, even
pay for tuition. Most sites are free.
Traffic was heavy at many sites, before the Nov. 1 application
deadline for early decision and early action at several leading colleges
and universities. But peak season has yet to come, with traditional
application deadlines of December or January.
Though seniors are the ones most focused now, high school
juniors are already surfing the Web for college data even though they
have a year to go before applying. "The Internet is like a bridge to
tons of information," says Ashvin Dewan, a junior at Hightower High
School in Missouri City, Texas.
His guidance counselor, Paula Cox, is grateful. She says
online services have allowed students to research schools themselves,
freeing counselors to focus on advice.
Other counselors urge caution, however. Just about anyone,
they point out, can set up a Web site catering to a high school
audience. Commercial Web services might lure students into a scam or
give bad information, such as an incorrect application deadline.
"Web sites information can be very, very unreliable," says
Stephen D. Singer, director of college counseling at the Horace Mann
School in New York.
One site in particular, ecollegebid.org, irks Joyce
Smith, executive director of the National Association for College
Admission Counseling in Alexandria, Va. That site treats selecting a
college like an auction. Families bid for a certain amount of tuition,
and schools willing to accept that then respond.
"It's a totally different spin on college," she says. "It's
more like a novelty than the start of an education process."
Even though Internet sites allow guidance counselors to focus
on guidance and counseling, Smith worries that some students might try
to bypass counselors completely and forego their advice.
"A child can sit at a computer for hours searching for
information, and the only way a high school would know," she notes, "is
if the child has to ask for a transcript."
Eliminating the relationship is never the goal, insists Young
Shin, president and chief executive of embark.com in San Francisco. He says
no site can meet all of a student's needs.
Besides the basic research available on the Internet,"every
student always needs special counseling and advice," he says.
Leading Web sites such as The Princeton Review's http://www.review.com/ and Peterson's
http://www.collegequest.com/
let students narrow their choices based on size, location and other
personal preferences. Before, students had to use CD-ROM services at
their schools' computers or leaf through books and college brochures.
The nonprofit College Board has a site, collegeboard.org, offering
similar services. It recently announced plans to create a for-profit
site, collegeboard.com, to
offer additional features this spring.
Some sites compile details on academic requirements and campus
life, and many link directly to the colleges' own Web sites.
Students can also apply to some schools online through some of
the commercial sites, using a special form or digital image of a
college's own application.
Help is also available with tuition. Embark.com plans to
announce a promotional sweepstakes drawing with a grand prize of four
years' tuition, or up to $80,000. Embark and other sites have databases
with scholarship information.
"You'd be amazed at how much money is out there and how much
money goes unclaimed," says Evan Schnittman, vice president at the New
York-based Princeton Review.
Not for lack of searching. The number of registered users at
his site rose at least five times this year -- and should increase as
peak season nears.
Of course, the computer will not write the application essay
-- although, for $60 or more (major credit cards accepted), several
services will edit essays and offer suggestions. Others offer sample
essays and writing tips for free.
Heather Goode, a high school senior in Davie, Fla., relied on
BestSchoolsUSA.com and
other sites to explore colleges in her area. She wants to remain near
her family, so she is thinking of the University of Miami.
She prefers the Internet over visiting her guidance
counselor's office during the busy school day. "You can do it at your
leisure," she says. "If you're bored at 3 o'clock in the morning, you go
online."
The results won Mammen Zachariah, a freshman at Carnegie
Mellon University in Pittsburgh.
"If you use the Internet, you get more information about each
individual college," he says. "If I didn't have the Internet, I wouldn't
have applied here. Through the Internet, I knew it was a good school."