Sunday, June 21, 2020

Well-Rounded College Applicants

Well-Rounded College Applicants June 3 Highly selective colleges dont seek well-rounded students. They seek singularly talented students. It never ceases to amaze us how parents and students still believe that being well-rounded is a positive in highly selective college admissions. The regular readers of our college admissions blog sure do know better. Being well-rounded not only hasnt been a plus but its been a major negative for many years now in highly selective college admissions. Sure, there was a time when well-rounded students students who excelled at the flute, at wide receiver, and at Key Club were sought after by the nations elite universities. But that time is not now. That time passed quite a while ago. Well-rounded college applicants as the sought after group in highly selective college admissionsif the back of your SAT vocabulary card for anachronism doesnt use this as an example, it sure should! And yet parents still boast to us about their well-rounded children. And you can imagine that if this is how a parent is depicting a student, this is likely not so dissimilar from how the student will later depict him or herself on college applications. The truth is that being well-rounded sure can be important in life. It can be really nice to bust out some Beethoven on the piano at a dinner party (who does that?). It can be nice to catch a football on a crowded beach. But that which is important in life isnt necessarily important in highly selective college admissions. In Malcolm Gladwells book Outliers: The Story of Success, the ubiquitous author writes, Ten thousand hours is the magic number of greatnessyou need to have practiced, to have apprenticed, for 10,000 hours before you get good. Gladwell is absolutely right on. It was true for Bill Gates with programming. It was true for Steph Curry of the Golden State Warriors with his three-point shot (Steve Nash even recently termed Curry the greatest shooter in NBA history). Dont be ordinary at lots of things. Be extraordinary at one thing. Ordinarys boring. Extraordinarys anything but boring. Highly selective colleges dont want boring. They want extraordinary. Understood? We hope so.

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