When I looked at The Princeton Review’s newly released lists of America’s most popular dream colleges, I immediately saw a problem.
Before I explain why, take a look at the dream colleges that teenagers and parents cited most often.
- Stanford University
- Harvard University
- New York University
- Princeton University
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Yale University
- UCLA
- University of Pennsylvania
- University of Southern California
- University of California, Berkeley.
- Harvard University
- Stanford University
- Princeton University
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Yale University
- Duke University
- Brown University
- New York University
- University of Notre Dame
- Northwestern University
I find these lists troubling and here’s why: I’d argue that the responses show a serious lack of imagination and downright laziness.
It’s easy to mention Ivy League schools when a pollster asks about dream colleges because everybody knows they are prestigious. It’s also easy to include NYU as a dream school because how cool would it be to attend college in New York City? And lots of teenagers would love to attend college on the West Coast where it offers beaches, sunshine and lots of winning sports teams.
However, if I gave teens and parents a quiz that simply asked them to name just five things about their dream schools that makes these institutions smart academic choices, I bet the vast majority of people would flunk.
Unfortunately, many families select schools without much thought. I find this strange since parents and their children have essentially spent 18 years getting ready for college and yet when they have to finally make important decisions they punt.
Children add dream schools to their list because they’d look good on a sweatshirt, but in reality they know very little about these schools, which the vast majority of them aren’t going to get into anyway. Instead these teens take the path of least resistance. Most end up going to schools 50 to 100 miles away without exploring other options.
It’s a shame that parents and teens don’t put more effort into developing a college list since there are so many wonderful colleges scattered across the country with excellent programs that people don’t even know exist.
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