‘Just
plain wrong’ Former admission dean Fred
Hargadon responds to ‘Chosen’ author Jerome Karabel
By Fred Hargadon
Shortly before the planned publication in PAW of an excerpt from
Jerome Karabel’s book, The Chosen, the editor, Marilyn
Marks, forwarded me a copy of the excerpt and invited any comments
I might wish to make. Below are my comments.
While I certainly do not want to appear to be taking issue with
the main core of Mr. Karabel’s book, a sociological history
of discrimination at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton in the first half
of the last century, I find the analysis he presents of contemporary
admissions practices and policies at Princeton in this particular
section to be so far off the mark and so dependent upon a mix of
selectively chosen data and second-hand observations masquerading
as scholarly research as to lead me to question the purpose of much
of it having been included in his book.
This particular excerpt seems to me only somewhat tangentially
related to a history of the discrimination once faced by Jews when
applying for admission to Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, discrimination
I am glad to say was history by the time I became involved
in admissions in 1964 (at Swarthmore College). After discussing
the fact that Princeton’s entering freshman classes have a
much lower percentage of Jewish students than do the freshman classes
at Harvard and Yale and a lower percentage in the 1990s than in
the mid-1980s, the author then takes it upon himself to opine on
everything from how we at Princeton assign academic ratings to applicants,
to our having an Early Decision program, to the University’s
doing away with compulsory loans and replacing them with grant aid,
and then he proceeds to suggest ulterior motives for just about
everything we have done. Mr. Karabel’s suggested motives are
just plain wrong.
The question of why a smaller number of entering freshmen at Princeton
indicate their religious preference to be Jewish than is the case
at Harvard and Yale is one we have looked at periodically beginning
back in June 1992, when I made a detailed report on the subject
to President Harold Shapiro, Provost Hugo Sonnenschein, and Dean
of the College Nancy Malkiel. The expressed concern has not been
that the percentage of Jewish students entering Princeton has been
lower than either the percentage entering all colleges or the percentage
entering private universities in the same year (the average respective
percentages for Princeton during my 15 years as dean were 10.5 for
Princeton, 1.9 nationally, and 6.3 for private universities), but
rather that the percentage at Princeton lags behind the percentages
reported by Harvard or Yale. (NB: Our data come from an annual survey
of freshmen conducted by the Higher Education Research Institute
at UCLA. Since neither Harvard nor Yale participate in that survey
and their data come from their respective Hillel organizations,
the data are not precisely comparable.)
Unfortunately, the critical information in placing Princeton’s
data in context (or, for that matter, Harvard’s and Yale’s)
is simply not there. We have no idea how many of our applicants
in any given year are Jewish nor any idea of how many of those to
whom we have offered admission are Jewish. Not having that information
of course makes it a field day for anyone inclined to look for some
sort of bias, intended or not. No one who has spent as many years
in selective admissions as I have is unaware of how often those
disappointed by our admission decisions are inclined to rationalize
that disappointment by claiming a bias on the part of the admission
office with regard to sex, race, religion, socioeconomic status,
geographical location, or even with regard to height and weight,
this latter being information which, like religious preference,
we neither inquire about nor take into consideration.
Alas, there appears to be an underlying assumption on the part
of Mr. Karabel that there is a “right” percentage of
an entering class that should be represented by Jewish students.
In my memo of June 1992, referred to above, I posed the following
question: “If one were to ask what, ideally, the University
would prefer that those various percentages [referring to all religious
preferences] be, what would be the response and on what basis would
it be derived? And by what means would we attempt to achieve them?”
That question is as relevant now as it was when I posed it in back
in 1992.
It can’t be said often enough that the mix of a particular
freshman class at Princeton, along any number of dimensions, ultimately
reflects in some measure the makeup of the applicant pool in a given
year and the individual decisions made by those to whom we offer
admission that year (and it’s a completely different set of
individuals from one year to the next!).
While it’s tempting to consider what effect, if any, changes
in male/female ratio, or the percentages of freshman classes comprised
of minority students and international students, may have had on
the percentage of Jewish students enrolled, caution is advised.
While it’s the case that during my 15 years at Princeton the
percentage of females in a freshman class grew to 48 percent, the
percentage of U.S. minority students grew to 28 percent, and the
percentage of international students grew to almost 9 percent (not
counting those international students who happened to hold dual
citizenship), it’s also the case that during that same 15
years the percentage of Jewish students bounced around from year
to year, going up and down in a range anywhere between 9 percent
to 13 percent.
Nor do I have any idea what Mr. Karabel has in mind by suggesting
that admission officers visiting more suburban schools may have
negatively impacted the percentage of Jewish students enrolled.
In the first place, I am not even sure that we did increase the
number of suburban schools visited. I do know that we decreased
the number of individual school visits and increased the number
of evening sessions we held in cities across the country, inviting
students, parents, and counselors from every school within commuting
distance to such programs. Nor, in any event, am I aware that Jewish
students aren’t to be found in suburban high schools across
the country.
As for “geographic diversity,” we at Princeton cared
more about the state of mind of individual applicants than the state
they happened to reside in when applying. It is the case that the
applicant pool at Princeton, like the applicant pools at all similar
institutions, has become increasingly nationalized (even increasingly
internationalized) over the past couple of decades.
One significant change I did make during my tenure at Princeton
was to have the staff read applications, not by school and not by
region, but randomly across the entire country. I believed it decreased
the likelihood of our unconsciously favoring applicants from those
schools we were most familiar with and/or had “done the most
business with” over the years, and further, that by not reading
applicants from the same school together, we’d be less likely
to unconsciously limit the number accepted at any one school, or,
on the other hand, unconsciously feel reluctant to not admit anyone
from a given school in a given year. Finally, it gave every staff
member an opportunity to obtain a better sense of just how many
terrific students there are in places small and large across the
country. In other words, we tried our best to focus on the individual
applicants (which is what we promised to do when they applied) rather
than on particular schools or particular geographical locations.
I don’t happen to think there is only one way to conduct
a successful admissions process. In some sense, as they used to
say about politics, all admissions is local. Given the set of objectives
and goals of each of the three institutions I served and given the
set of resources available, I did my best to run as fair and effective
an admissions process as I could. Was our process the perfect or
ideal one? I don’t know for sure. But it was the best approximation
I could come up with given the nature of the task, the number of
interested constituencies involved competing for the same number
of finite spaces, and the sometimes seemingly mutually exclusive
goals we were asked to achieve. As I look back on my experience,
I think that what I was engaged in was what the economist Herbert
Simon called “satisficing”; that is, attempting to find
the best approximate solution to achieving a variety of sometimes
competing goals rather than putting all of our efforts into optimizing
any one of them.
When it comes to Mr. Karabel’s characterizing our admissions
and financial aid policies as if they had no basis other than to
compete with Harvard and Yale, all I can say is bull!
I think he reveals more about his mindset than about mine. Neither
in the hundreds of talks I have given over the years, nor in anything
I’ve written, have I ever referred to the U.S. News &
World Report rankings of the three colleges I’ve represented
or ever implied invidious distinctions between one college and another.
Nor have I ever permitted my staff to do so. On the contrary, after
remarking on aspects of, say, Princeton, about which I think students
and their parents should be familiar (e.g., its size, its location,
its JP and senior thesis requirements, its residential setup, and
the like), I remind them that I am not in any way attempting to
make Princeton seem better or worse than other colleges they will
be considering, but rather just different in some ways. I even go
so far as to name five or six Princeton faculty members who have
been honored in one way or another (Nobel Prizes, Pulitzer Prizes,
National Book Awards, and the like) and then name the institutions
where they received their undergraduate educations, none of them
Ivies or Stanford, and a few of them colleges some may not have
heard of.
Similarly, the tone I struck and the advice I offered in my “Letter
to Prospective Applicants” was not centered on Princeton but
rather was based on my trying to put myself in their shoes. That
my “Letter,” last sent to prospective applicants for
admission to Princeton’s Class of ’07, has continued
to be reproduced for distribution by high school counselors far
and wide to juniors and seniors for general advice is surely testimony
to my not “marketing” one particular institution.
In short, I have never made decisions or adopted policies or processes
with an eye to winning some sort of “game” with Harvard
or Yale or any other college. I simply don’t believe that
the Ivies or Stanford corner the market on bright and talented students.
My own sense is that each of us enrolls our fair share of such students,
and I doubt that there’s an experienced admissions officer
at any of the Ivies who isn’t aware that thousands of students
who are every bit as bright and talented as any we enroll quite
happily attend hundreds of other terrific colleges that were their
first choices.
My sense is that it’s only trivia nuts and obsessed spin
doctors who get a kick out of keeping score on how many applicants
who have received offers of admission from more than one college
opt to enroll at this or that one. If colleges like HYP really mean
it when they say in their press releases each year that they could
have admitted one or two or three equally good classes from their
applicant pools, who gives a damn about keeping “box scores”
of what number of applicants with multiple offers of admissions
opted for this or that college? I, for one, never have. Indeed,
I have said on many occasions that I think it is the saving grace
of U.S. higher education that we don’t all agree on the same
one or two thousand to admit each year.
Any disappointment I have when an applicant decides not to enroll,
whether it’s at Harvard or Yale or at a college I’m
not familiar with, quickly passes as I realize how pleased I am
by every applicant who does accept our offer of admission. As difficult
as Mr. Karabel may find it to believe, especially since he’s
never sat in my chair and has no inkling of what has gone through
my mind, it really is that simple. In truth, when all the dust has
settled on a given year’s admissions process in early May,
the cloud hanging over my head at that point each year was realizing
how much disappointment we’d caused for so many great kids
we had to turn away.
Having spent a year at the Russian Research Center at Harvard,
having served a six-year term as a member of its Visiting Committee
to the College and Graduate School of Arts and Science, being a
staff member of its Summer Institute on College Admissions for over
30 years now, and given my admiration for my colleagues in admissions
there, I obviously hold Harvard in great respect. But I by no means
consider it the only excellent university or college in the country,
nor do I consider the education it offers or its freshman profile
or its admissions process the litmus test by which all other colleges
and universities should measure themselves. In this regard, I am
clearly a fan of the “let a hundred flowers bloom” school
of thought.
I feel the same way about Haverford College, where I gained a
great education; and Swarthmore College, where I taught and was
also dean of admission; and Stanford; and Princeton. These are all
great institutions as are dozens and dozens of others across the
country, based on all of the people I have met who have graduated
from any number of colleges whose names don’t appear in the
media as often as HYP or Stanford. Years ago I even started keeping
a list on my computer of recent graduates I’d met from other
colleges, some of them large public institutions, some of them small
independent colleges I hadn’t heard of before, under the heading,
“People we would have been lucky to enroll as undergraduates
had they applied.”
As far as Early Decision vs. Early Action admissions programs
are concerned, my suggesting that Princeton should change from the
latter to the former had absolutely nothing to do with “competition”
with other schools, improving yield, attempting to appear more selective,
or any other ulterior motive attributed by Mr. Karabel, albeit his
imaginings are very similar to the opinions of other critics that
have appeared in the media from time to time over the years. No,
I had simply reached the conclusion that Early Action didn’t
make sense to me for Princeton.
For my first 20 years as an admissions dean (five at Swarthmore
and 15 at Stanford), we had no early admission program of any kind.
In fact, the only time I was aware of such programs in the Ivies
would be when a Stanford applicant who had received a positive early
nod from one or another Ivy would send a letter to that effect for
inclusion in his or her Stanford application, presumably in an effort
to impress us and maybe improve his or her chances for admission
to Stanford. Of course, when I arrived at Princeton, an Early Action
program was already in place. Well, after a few years of stopping
everything on Nov. 1 to devote all of our time to reading and evaluating
and making decisions on early applicants in time to let them know
of our decisions the first week in December, I questioned the rationale
for such a program. I asked myself why the admissions staff should
drop everything on Nov. 1 to read and evaluate and make decisions
on one group of applicants, so that they could be notified of our
decisions a mere five weeks after the deadline for submitting their
applications, those being offered admission then being given four
and a half months to let us know whether they’d be enrolling
or not, while the bulk of our applicants would not learn of our
decisions until at least three months after the deadline for submitting
their applications, those of that group being offered admissions
then given about three weeks in which to let us know whether they’d
be enrolling or not.
In sum, I argued that if we were to have an early admission program,
an Early Decision program, involving a quid pro quo of some sort,
was far more defensible. It would not only curb the increasingly
evident growth trend of Early Action applications (why wouldn’t
a program that enabled an applicant to have his/her cake and eat
it too become more and more popular?), but by limiting applications
to those committed to enrolling if offered admission, it would significantly
increase the likelihood that those who sought an early decision
had done their college search homework and had reached the conclusion
that Princeton is the college they’d most want to attend if
offered admission. I have not changed my mind on this question.
I also suggested some additional positive effects of an Early
Decision program. One would be that of reducing the multiple application
pipeline, since those admitted ED would be withdrawing any applications
they may have already submitted to other colleges and/or not submitting
any other applications at all. In other words, if we admitted 500
students ED, that would reduce the multiple application pipeline
by anywhere from 2,000 to 3,000 applications, assuming applicants
at that time were filing, on average, anywhere from four to six
applications (an average that has jumped considerably in recent
years, in part because of how easy it’s become to apply to
a larger number of colleges by using the Common Application). And
if one further added the number of ED admits of the group of similar
colleges with such programs, the number of applications by which
the multiple application pipeline would be reduced would not be
insignificant. I also suggested that it was even likely that a school
like Princeton having an ED program might make life better for those
colleges who frequently were spending a lot of staff time and effort
dealing with applicants who were treating them as a backup in the
event they did not gain admission to, in this case, Princeton.
I also suggested that with the increased pressure on admission
offices to come up with a freshman class marked by increased diversity,
the profile of our ED admits would at least give us something to
build upon. I have no doubt that ED made a contribution to our enrolling
successively more diverse freshman classes.
The fact that Yale requested, and I sent them, a copy of my position
paper on this issue before they, too, decided to move from EA to
ED at the same time, should have made it obvious to Mr. Karabel
that I was not even remotely proposing ED as a means of competing
with Harvard and Yale. Nor was I persuaded by the various criticisms
leveled at ED, not all of them completely disinterested. For instance,
I have seen no evidence that EA applicant groups or EA admit groups
are significantly more heterogeneous than ED applicant or admit
groups. And if I’m not mistaken, some EA schools fill the
same percentage of freshman class slots with those admitted early
as Princeton does with those admitted ED.
In Princeton’s experience, at least, there has been no significant
difference in the academic credentials of those admitted ED and
those admitted regular decision (RD). For the eight years we had
ED classes while I was dean at Princeton (the Classes of ’00
through ’07), the mean SAT scores for ED and RD admits were
identical for five of those years. In one year, the mean math SAT
score was 10 points higher for the ED admits, and in two years,
the mean verbal SAT score was 10 points lower for ED admits. So
much for the mythical “100-point” ED advantage that
Mr. Karabel proposes as fact.
And, finally, I would like to address the contention that students
admitted ED may lose bargaining power for financial aid they might
otherwise have in the event of receiving multiple offers of admission.
That is worth considering, although I confess I don’t think
that concern is particularly relevant to Princeton, given Princeton’s
financial aid program. Moreover, for years now, the Princeton financial
aid office has made it possible for students, whether they’ve
applied or not, to use Princeton’s Financial Aid Estimator
online, whereby students and their families can fill in a financial
aid form anonymously and receive an estimate of how much financial
aid they’d likely be eligible to receive at Princeton. In
fact, many other colleges have referred students to Princeton’s
online form for the purpose of estimating how much financial aid
they’d be eligible for and comparing it with the overall costs
at those colleges. But if a student intends to use multiple offers
of admission to bargain for more financial aid, my advice is for
that student not to apply ED.
As for my changing the range of test scores and grades for assigning
an Academic 1 rating, it had nothing to do with increasing the admission
office’s discretion when making admission decisions and everything
to do with not automatically equating a very narrow range of high
test scores as the sole determinant of academic ability and talent,
let alone considering such scores, as does Mr. Karabel, as evidence
of “brilliance.” (I can see the ads from the multi-million-dollar
test prep industry now: “We will make you brilliant.”)
The rating system we used, and still use, is the same one I used
at Stanford, and I have been at this task of reading and evaluating
applications long enough to have some experience with the limits
of such ratings in predicting not just academic success in college
and graduate or professional school, but also success in any number
of fields later in life. If the policy of the University is to automatically
admit those students with the highest SAT scores, why have such
students complete applications at all? In that respect, the University
could adopt the system used in other countries of having the performance
on a single exam determine the university one attends. The SAT is
not an IQ test and was never meant to be
Finally, with regard to the ulterior motive Mr. Karabel divines
behind Princeton’s doing away with loans as a part of financial
aid awards and replacing those with grant aid, he is just plain
wrong and maligns the good intentions of Princeton. In all my years
in academia, I have never seen a less self-interested decision by
a board of trustees than the one made by Princeton’s trustees
to do away with loans. President Shapiro had been concerned for
a long time about the effect of having significant loans to pay
off on the career choices graduating seniors felt they had to make
each year. And he also believed that the farther down the socioeconomic
ladder students’ families are, the greater the burden loans
are, thus affecting the decisions such students and their families
make about which colleges even to consider. In the trustee discussions
I listened to when they made this decision, I never heard a word
about making this decision for “competitive” purposes.
In my opinion, President Shapiro and the trustees did the right
thing for the right reasons, and I couldn’t be prouder of
the initiative they took. Perhaps now Mr. Karabel can turn his attention
to seeking ulterior motives for the changes in financial aid subsequently
made by both Harvard and Yale, although I believe that they, too,
did the right thing for the right reasons.
Fred Hargadon was Princeton’s dean of admission from
1988 to 2003.