The great college aid game: suspense in a teen's first adult decision
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| New Rochelle, N.Y.
This is the third article in a series following five New Rochelle High School seniors on their quest for college financial aid. The project is a partnership between the Monitor and聽, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet affiliated with聽.
Karen Rose still remembers the student from a few years ago who was crying hysterically after class because she hadn鈥檛 been accepted to Georgetown University. Ms. Rose, a veteran social studies teacher at New Rochelle High School in suburban New York, knew that the girl鈥檚 academic record more than qualified her for Georgetown, which was also the alma mater of the girls' parents and other family members. And yet, inexplicably, she was rejected.
鈥淎ll I could say was, 鈥榊ou know, if your parents and your grandparents and your aunts and uncles tried to get in today, they probably wouldn鈥檛 because it鈥檚 much harder,鈥 鈥 Rose recalls. And as it gets harder, more and more students are going to be disappointed 鈥 and bewildered. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e done everything right, and yet they鈥檙e not getting what they were supposed to get,鈥 says Rose.
Fear of dashed hopes dominates the corridors of New Rochelle High School with just six weeks until college-bound seniors have to make their first adult decision: where they will spend the next four years.
For many of these students anticipating the final round of college acceptances, rejections, and financial aid offers 鈥 the fear of making a mistake when they choose is just as great as the fear of rejection. 聽They鈥檙e also thinking ahead, to the fall, when they will be on their own for the first time.
聽鈥淚n this time between the last semester of high school and the first semester of college, there鈥檚 a lot of emotion whether it鈥檚 expressed explicitly or not,鈥 says Karen Levin Coburn, co-author of 鈥淟etting Go: A Parents鈥 Guide to Understanding the College Years.鈥 鈥淭he student is thinking about identity. Will I ever find my place? Who will I be in this new school? It鈥檚 sort of starting over, which is liberating and exciting but also terrifying.鈥
Being accepted to the schools of their dreams isn鈥檛 the only obstacle. Their first adult decision may be about money. 聽More than three-quarters of current college freshmen were admitted to their first-choice schools, according to a from the University of California at Los Angeles, but only 56.9 percent chose to attend, an all-time low for the annual survey. Students cited high costs and financial aid as the reasons they declined their top schools.
Those are very real issues for students in economically diverse New Rochelle. Wealthy students don鈥檛 have to worry, and students whose families are below the poverty level are eligible for many scholarships. It鈥檚 the middle group 鈥 including some of聽the five seniors this yearlong series is following 鈥 who are the most affected, says Rose, families 鈥渨ho cannot afford $50,000 a year, but make too much to get any money. That鈥檚 the biggest group right now.鈥
Haleigh Doherty, the youngest of four, has known from the start that money would be a major factor in her decision, especially because her father, Brian, has been diagnosed with lung cancer. She applied to schools where she thought she would have a strong chance of getting a scholarship based on her grades, and Fairfield University in Connecticut offered her a $25,000 annual scholarship. Last month, she spent two days at the school as part of a program for accepted students and was very impressed with Fairfield鈥檚 strong sense of community and study abroad program.
All along, Haleigh鈥檚 parents have said it was her choice 鈥 and she took that responsibility seriously. As she got ready to make her decision, she thought about her two older sisters, who both ended up transferring from their first colleges. That was something she wanted to avoid.
鈥淚 put pressure on myself to make the right decision,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 really didn鈥檛 want to have to go to a place and then end up not liking it.鈥澛
By the end of her time on the Fairfield campus, she felt comfortable enough to make that choice, which she announced to her siblings by e-mailing them a picture of her wearing a Fairfield sweat shirt.
A generation ago, the majority of colleges notified students about admissions decisions on the same day in mid-April. But now a wide range of admissions policies such as early decision and rolling admissions means that some students already know what their future holds, while others have to wait until the end of March, when many of the elite schools release their decisions.
鈥淭hey have control over the process when they鈥檙e doing their applications but once they hit send, they lose control and now it鈥檚 like the great unknown until the end of the month,鈥 says Michael Kenny, New Rochelle鈥檚 guidance coordinator.
The disparity between those who know and those who don鈥檛 exacerbates the stress.
聽鈥淭here鈥檚 definitely a lot of anxiety,鈥 says senior Adaugo Ezike. 鈥淧eople are happy for those of their friends that did get in. There鈥檚 a shared feeling of joy.鈥
They are also comforting each other when bad news arrives. Two of Adaugo鈥檚 friends were accepted to the same top school, but one was not and, Adaugo says, that friend was 鈥渄evastated.鈥 When these friends get together now, they try to talk about other things, says Adaugo, who has been accepted to two State University of New York campuses, Stony Brook, and Binghamton, but is still waiting to hear from a dozen other schools, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Carnegie Mellon University, the colleges her older brothers attend.
As she waits, Adaugo also worries about what will happen to her family when she leaves. Her youngest brother, Dioka, 14, has been diagnosed with autism. 鈥淗e needs attention,鈥 she says. 鈥淏eing the only one at home is going to be very different for him.鈥 聽
She worries about her parents as well. 鈥淲henever they need to go out, it would usually be one of us taking care of him,鈥 she says. 鈥淣ow they would have to hire someone. That鈥檚 going to be a big adjustment in my household.鈥
Feeling torn between past and future is common for seniors at this time of year, says Ms. Coburn, who is also a consultant in residence at Washington University in St. Louis. 聽鈥淎 lot of them can鈥檛 really imagine leaving and going away to college even though they鈥檝e been preparing for it their whole lives,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey often feel pulled between wanting to savor everything, being with their friends, being in school, and feeling like, 鈥業鈥檝e got to get this decision behind me and I鈥檓 ready to start something new.鈥 鈥
For many students, that tension makes it hard to concentrate on classes. Matisse Clayton, who has been accepted to Temple University in Philadelphia
and Catholic University of America in Washington but is waiting to hear from other schools, admits to a case of 鈥渟enioritis.鈥 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 really like doing any type of work,鈥 she says, 鈥渆ven homework. I have to drag myself to do it. After all the stuff applying, it鈥檚 like I鈥檓 done with school, I鈥檓 done with everything.鈥
And her case isn鈥檛 the worst she knows of. 鈥淔or people who have already gotten in, it鈥檚 senioritis to another level,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey just don鈥檛 care at all.鈥 She hesitates a minute. 鈥淢aybe they care a little bit because they don鈥檛 want to get a different letter saying, 鈥極h, sorry鈥 鈥 from a college if their last semester grades plummet.
鈥淪chool is still on and their grades still matter,鈥 says Mr. Kenny, the guidance coordinator. 鈥淭hey still need to continue to perform in the classroom.鈥
To get past her senioritis, Matisse tries to focus on her favorite class this semester, calculus. That helps push out anxiety, she says. 鈥淚 must have thought a hundred times today 鈥楢m I going to get in?鈥 鈥 she says.聽
At the same time, she鈥檚 also thinking about what she will miss most when she leaves. Alvin & Friends, the restaurant her parents run in downtown New Rochelle, is closed on Mondays, and that鈥檚 when the family of five, including her younger brother and sister, all get together for dinner. 鈥淢y dad will cook or we will pick up from our favorite restaurant, which is usually sushi,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have our phones out. We catch up on everything that has been going on. I like those moments a lot.鈥
Even in this era of constant texting, moving out of the house means breaking some of those close bonds, which can also be unsettling. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 going on psychologically is that they鈥檙e wanting to be independent and there鈥檚 this underlying fear of whether they can handle it,鈥 says Coburn. Parents, too, are feeling the strain, she adds. 鈥淭hey want to know that they can send their children off, that they will be able to take care of themselves, and yet there鈥檚 still this desire to parent, to protect them, to make sure they do it right.鈥
Esteban Acevedo has been getting lots of advice from his parents, who attended college in their native Colombia. 鈥淭hey tell me to remember to eat all three meals, to always do my laundry, to sleep, to not leave my homework for the last minute.鈥 Esteban, who hopes to be a doctor, has been accepted to three State University of New York campuses 鈥 Binghamton, Stony Brook, and Albany 鈥 and is still waiting to hear from other schools.
Leaving home will be particularly bittersweet for him. His father, the first in the family to come to this country, was living here for a decade before Esteban and his mother and younger sister joined him just four years ago. Now, they will probably be separated again.
鈥淢y dad wants me to go to NYU or a New York school,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e really liked that I got into the SUNY schools. I think that because my dad didn鈥檛 see me for so long, he actually wants me to stay in the state or nearby.鈥 Will that affect his choice? 鈥淚 understand him, but I don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 going to change my decision if I want to go far away.鈥
Students like Haleigh who have already been accepted are visiting campuses to see where they would feel comfortable. Camille N鈥橠iaye Muller learned in December that she had been awarded a full scholarship to Princeton University through a program called QuestBridge, which matches high-achieving low-income students with elite colleges. But until last month, she hadn鈥檛 seen the school. In early January, the co-chairman of Princeton鈥檚 regional alumni schools committee offered to drive her to campus on Alumni Day, Feb. 22.
鈥淚t was wonderful,鈥 says Camille, who is considering a career in international law. A highlight was seeing Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor (class of 1976) receive an alumni award. Camille, a dedicated dancer, also talked to a student about Princeton鈥檚 dance program, which impressed her. At the end of the day, she felt close to a decision but says she still wants to hear from other schools.
At some point soon, Camille says she will sit down at her desk, where she labored all fall over her applications. She says she鈥檒l probably come up with a list of pros and cons for her choices.
鈥淚 really like writing things down and seeing how it works out,鈥 she says. But in the end, she knows that 鈥渢here is no real bad choice. My college experience is what I make of it.鈥
As they head toward their personal finish lines, Camille and the other students should be cheered by the ultimate fate of the rejected Georgetown applicant who wept in Karen Rose鈥檚 classroom.
鈥淪he ended up at Villanova,鈥 Rose says. 鈥淪he loves it.鈥
This project is a partnership between the Monitor and聽, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet affiliated with Teachers College, Columbia University.聽漏 2014 海角大神 and the Hechinger Report.聽漏 2014 海角大神 and the Hechinger Report.