"Admissions is a terribly intangible process, very unscientific. We do it on feel as much as anything else...I have nightmares about people we haven't admitted. I've had nightmares about one girl three nights in a row. I'll have to do something about her."
Mary Anne Schwalbe '55, director of admissions, had difficulty pinning down exactly what she looks for in an application. The admissions officers have no hard and fast rules they use to determine who gets into Harvard. The final decisions are made in committees, where staff members spend long hours debating candidates' qualifications. By April 15, the ordeal is over.
For the applicant however, the process began as early as last September, when, after a few meetings with his guidance counselor, he declared himself a candidate for the Class of 1979 and sent in an application. Then he begins the long wait for the word from Harvard, a wait that is interrupted only by his interview with an alumnus or admissions officer.
"The best kind of interview is one that tends to highlight or focus on what's already in the folder," John P. Reardon, associate dean of admissions, said. If a candidate looks good on paper, but comes across shy and reserved in person, "there's no way we're going to put a lot of concern on a 20-minute talk," Reardon said.
Sometimes, however, the interview can uncover serious personal problems that would end a candidate's chances. Reardon told of a recent applicant "who had a lot of whacky things to say--I don't know what he was high on, just spaced." Reardon followed up on the interview and found that the candidate had "problems the guys in the school were not going to say in writing."
Alumni interviewers have more influence in the process at Harvard than at Radcliffe; they are better organized, have more information on the applicants, and even submit a list ranking all the applicants in the area.
They can also set their own interviewing style. One alumnus who was an executive at U.S. Steel, used to hold interviews in the company's boardroom. At one end of a huge oak table would sit four or five interviewers, at the other the interviewee.
After conducting an interview, an alumnus or staff member rates the candidate on his potential for admission and writes a report, which may range from a few sentences to several pages in length.
A typical interview is one done on Peter Mack (pseudonym), a first-rate football player who had 500 SAT scores. The interviewer wrote, "Peter Mack is perhaps the best motivated athlete we have had apply from this area in a long time" but also noted that he is academically "below the average Harvard standards." The rest of the report is an argument stressing Peter's leadership and athletic qualities ("Peter Mack is a leader. You can tell that when you walk into the locker room") and balancing this against his academic side ("Peter Mack is not a genius but..."). Harvard is Mack's only alternative to life as "a hired gun" for a football squad elsewhere and the interviewer concludes that "Harvard needs young men like Peter Mack and Peter Mack needs Harvard." The committee was dubious, but Peter Mack got in.
Once an application is complete in all respects (i.e. teacher reports, test scores, etc. are in), the folder is removed from the office's "dead file" and released to be read by admissions officials. An application will get two, sometimes three preliminary readings.
Each reader fills out a sheet containing a few comments on the applicant and, perhaps more importantly, gives him a set of one-to-six ratings on his extracurricular, athletic, academic and personal potential that form the candidate's admissions profile. These ratings--the same ones used by the interviewer--provide a handy numerical system that can be used to compare the most diverse candidates.
Reardon described what some of the ratings mean: "A 'one' means you're really super. Bob Portney is a one violinist; a 'two' and you're a student body president or a newspaper editor; a 'three' means you're pretty involved, a 'four' means you go home in the afternoon and watch T.V., a 'five' or a 'six' and you never move."
A 'one' academic rating goes to fewer than one in a hundred candidates and, according the offic's forms, indicates someone with "true creative intellect. Summa potential," as well as "unusual accomplishments, top grades and mid-700 or above test scores." Most students admitted to Harvard receive a "one," "two," or "three" academic rating.
Dean K. Whitla, associate dean of admissions, compiles all the information on each candidate and computer codes it to produce the "docket," a listing of each candidate, his test scores, interview reports, teacher recommendations, etc. Every shred of information, except perhaps the student's essay, has been reduced to a number on the one line he receives on the docket.
But before the committees consider the cases, admissions officials draw up "target figures" for each section of the country. Some regions cover several states while others include only a few private schools like Andover and Exeter. The officials use the preliminary ratings of the applicants to judge the quality of the pool from each region and, together with precedent of "admits" from there over the past few years, set the number of students they would like to take from that region. The full committee of about 20 meets to approve the targets, then breaks down into regional subcommittees.
Read more in News
COMMITTING THE INSANERecommended Articles
-
How Recruiting WorksAthletic recruiting is an arduous, year-long process involving a few admissions officers, dozens of coaches, hundreds of alumni, and thousands
-
Speaker Debate Fairness of SAT ExaminationLast night in Boylston Hall, over 40 Harvard students listened to two speakers discuss the fairness of the Scholastic Aptitude
-
Colleges Urged to Rely Less on Standardized TestsNew guidelines from the Department of Education calling on colleges to depend less on standardized tests in the admissions process
-
Athletic Director Search NarrowsWith Harvard athletic director William J. Cleary’s ’56 retirement scheduled to take effect in just over three weeks, the search
-
Reardon Named Admissions DirectorJohn P. Reardon '60, former associate dean of Admissions and Financial Aid, succeeds Robert E. Kaufmann '62 as the new
-
Whitla Claims Psychological Tests In Admissions Violate Harvard AimPsychological tests "are interesting as tools of investigation but should not be used to evaluate candidates for admissions," according to