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Social media a growing concern when applying to college


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By Natasha Singer, New York Times

At Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, admissions officers are still talking about the high school senior who attended a campus information session last year for prospective students. Throughout the presentation, she apparently posted disparaging comments on Twitter about her fellow attendees, repeatedly using a common expletive.

Perhaps she hadn’t realized that colleges keep track of their social media mentions.

“It was incredibly unusual and foolish of her to do that,” Scott A. Meiklejohn, Bowdoin’s dean of admissions and financial aid, told me last week. The college ultimately denied the student admission, he said, because her academic record wasn’t competitive. But had her credentials been better, those indiscreet posts could have scuttled her chances.

“We would have wondered about the judgment of someone who spends their time on their mobile phone and makes such awful remarks,” Meiklejohn said.

As certain high school seniors work meticulously this month to finish their early applications to colleges, some may not realize that comments they casually make online could negatively affect their prospects. In fact, new research from Kaplan Test Prep, the service owned by the Washington Post Company, suggests that online scrutiny of college hopefuls is growing.

Of 381 college admissions officers who answered a Kaplan telephone questionnaire this year, 31 percent said they had visited an applicant’s Facebook or other personal social media page to learn more about them — a five-percentage-point increase from last year. More crucially for those trying to get into college, 30 percent of the admissions officers said they had discovered information online that had negatively affected an applicant’s prospects.

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Comments (2)
  1. observer says - Posted: November 13, 2013

    The world may as well get used to the idea that your cyber footprint is going to be used to determine your suitability for opportunities to a degree most people have no concept of. Also used probably more often to target you for crooked scams etc, based on your posts, sites you visit etc etc. And it grows every day.

    I admit to using the internet to scope out possible employees, business partners….it certainly has provided a forewarning of several personal proclivities I expected and knew how to handle in business. Sorts out the frauds and fabricators.

    So be careful folks, keep your temper on the internet or risk being bitten.

  2. Biggerpicture says - Posted: November 13, 2013

    Sounds like s good reason to post anonymously.