| Admissions
Decisions Go "High Tech"
Several
years ago, Tufts began sending out admissions decisions by email,
starting a trend that has caught on nationwide.
Medford/Somerville,
Mass. [11.28.01] -- The days of
waiting by the mailbox for a thick envelope from the Admissions
Office are over. With increasingly tech-savvy applicants and
a large number of international students seeking enrollment, Tufts
turned to email and the Internet to send out its admissions decisions
-- initiating a trend that is just beginning to be copied nationwide
by schools like Harvard and Yale.
"This
is a medium in which students feel comfortable," Tufts' David
Cuttino -- dean of undergraduate admissions -- told USA Today.
"Every year, the level of talent and the ability of students working
electronically grows."
The
high-tech systems at Tufts' Admissions Office are growing just
as quickly. What began as a test program use email to notify international
students of acceptances has rapidly grown into standard practice
at Tufts.
This
year, the University will put its decisions on a password-protected
website, which Cuttino says is a more secure method to notify
students than just an emailed letter. A traditional paper letter
is mailed to every student as well.
Since
it was implemented, the new system has gotten high marks from
students, especially international applicants who often have to
wait a long time for their mail to arrive.
"We
are dealing with students around the world," Cuttino told the
Chronicle of Higher Education. "Mail is slower in some
areas than others, and in some areas of the world there are mail
strikes."
Even
students who were not admitted to Tufts liked the electronic notification
because they learned about the decisions quickly.
For
the newest generation of college applications, the paper process
probably won't be missed.
"Electronic
notification is just one way the admissions process is moving
online," reported USA Today. "[Cuttino said] students research
schools, communicate with them, schedule campus visits and apply
electronically."
And
each year, the applicants are more and more tech-savvy.
"Each
incoming class of students makes the preceding class look like
technical Neanderthals," Cuttino told the Chronicle. "This
is the medium in which they are comfortable."
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