24小时热门版块排行榜    

查看: 665  |  回复: 2

zjdaniel

金虫 (小有名气)

[交流] 【Suggestion】overseas study-related news that you might learn from

the hand-picked news,I reckon,very useful for these who want to go abroad for further study,news key points I can draw,
1.application surges to American colleges
2.take care with curriculum vitae stuff
3.standout community service
4.careful with your word
5.jet lag


Recruiting in China Pays Off for U.S. Colleges
By JACQUES STEINBERG
Published: February 11, 2011
GRINNELL, Iowa — The glossy color brochures, each crammed with photos depicting a Chinese student’s high-achieving life from birth to young adulthood, pile up in the admissions office at Grinnell College here.
“Hi Professors!” one young woman announced in her bound booklet, sometimes known in China as a “brag sheet,” which included a photo of herself as a baby. She characterized her childhood as “naïve and curious,” and described herself now as “sincere, kind and tough.”
The brochures, though they are almost never read by admissions officers, are a sign of Grinnell’s success marketing itself in China — a plan that has paid off in important ways, like diversifying the student body and attracting students who can sometimes pay full tuition.
At rural Grinnell, nearly one of every 10 applicants being considered for the class of 2015 is from China.
Dozens of other American colleges and universities are seeing a surge in applications (and similar brochures) from students in China, where a booming economy means that more families can pursue the dream of an American higher education.
But that success — following a 30 percent increase last year in the number of Chinese studying in the United States — has created a problem for admissions officers. At Grinnell, for example, how do they choose perhaps 15 students from the more than 200 applicants from China? After all, the 11-member admissions committee cannot necessarily rely on the rubrics it applies to American applications (which are challenging enough to sort through).
Consider, for example, that half of Grinnell’s applicants from China this year have perfect scores of 800 on the math portion of the SAT, making the performance of one largely indistinguishable from another.
But the most accomplished applicants will have grades in the 70s or 80s, because Chinese schools tend to grade on a far less generous curve than American high schools. Few will have had the opportunity to take honors or Advanced Placement courses to demonstrate their ability to do college work, since such courses are rare in China.
Then there is the challenge of assessing an applicant’s command of English, since some Chinese families have been known to hire “agents” to write the application essay. These are the same advisers who counsel families to spend money on the fancy brochures. “They should save their money,” Seth Allen, the dean of admission and financial aid at Grinnell, said as he glanced at the full-color brag sheets stacked on a nearby desk.
Mr. Allen said that few would actually be read by the overworked admissions officers as they plowed through nearly 3,000 applications over all. In fact, the next stop for the brochures, said Jonathan C. Edwards, Grinnell’s coordinator of international admission, would be the recycling bin.
Mr. Allen, Mr. Edwards and their colleagues said they spend most of their time on Chinese applications trying to parse the essays — paying particular attention, as they might with an American candidate, to whether they detect the authentic voice and sensibility.
A young woman from Shanghai, for example, who had scored 800 on the math portion of the SAT, and nearly 600 on the main verbal section, impressed Mr. Edwards with an essay that described her volunteering at a rehabilitation center, where a young autistic boy captured her heart.
“Such a hopeless boy evoked my strong feeling to help him and love him,” she wrote. “As time passed by, I found he was interested in hearing the special sound of the piano and was gifted in playing piano.”
The applicant was admitted to Grinnell in its early decision round last fall.
Another Chinese applicant who wrote about her community service made a less favorable impression, at least with her essay, by writing about her own hardship while helping others after the earthquake in 2008 in Sichuan Province. “Every day, I showered and brushed my teeth using cold water,” she wrote. “It was unbearable.”
The admissions officers sometimes reach out to teachers and counselors at the applicants’ high schools — especially those that have emerged as “feeders” to Grinnell and other American colleges.
Such relationships have been further cemented during each of the last two summers, when Mr. Allen barnstormed China — stopping in Beijing, Zhengzhou, Changsha and Shanghai — on a recruiting tour with representatives from a handful of other liberal arts colleges, including Franklin & Marshall and Williams. (Grinnell’s applications from China were down slightly this year, as were its applications over all, but still greater than they were five years ago.)
For the colleges, such tours are motivated at least partly by money.
Grinnell, for example, is “need-blind” when considering American students — who are evaluated regardless of their ability to pay — but its process for admitting international students is “need-aware.”
So an applicant from China or another country could have an edge if he or she can pay full tuition.
And yet, in the name of socioeconomic diversity, Grinnell also has a dozen full scholarships set aside for international applicants, including those from China, who need help paying tuition.
“I realize what regional differences there are in China,” Mr. Allen said. “Lumping students into this amorphous Chinese applicant pool really isn’t doing them justice.”
Grinnell started seeing a steady stream of Chinese applications in the early 2000s, and says it can point to strong academic accomplishments among those applicants it has accepted.
Their graduation rate has been comparable to the 1,600-member Grinnell student body over all — about 84 percent of those who enroll graduate in four years — and most Chinese students at Grinnell do “very well” in economics, math or science, the subjects in which they are most likely to major (and usually double-major), Mr. Allen said. Help with writing English papers is also available in a writers’ workshop.
“Chinese students are required to devote significantly more time to their studies than American students, and this generally carries through when they come to college in the U.S.,” he said.
Chinese applicants have also been learning about Grinnell and other American colleges and universities through a popular Chinese Web site, cuus.cn — which stands for Chinese Undergraduates in the United States, but the letters are also meant to be shorthand for “See You in the U.S.”
“Grinnell in My Eyes,” an article written in Chinese and posted on the site by a recent graduate, is a big bouquet to the school; the writer pays tribute to Grinnell’s flexibility (“if you don’t like the current major, you may also choose independent major”) and the dining hall (“glorious French windows.”)
If there is an attribute that American and Chinese applicants share, it may be the ardor they often demonstrate toward Grinnell and the other highly selective colleges they hope will find a place for them.
“A girl from China called the other day after lunch, which was 2 or 3 in the morning for her,” Mr. Edwards said. “She said she was calling to make sure everything in her application was complete.”
“I had to tell her to go to bed,” he said.

[ Last edited by zjdaniel on 2011-2-12 at 16:09 ]
回复此楼

» 猜你喜欢

parapetjunketspreebedsithypochondrianabobessbuzzwordlineup
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

小木虫(沙发+1,金币+0.5):恭喜抢个沙发,再给个红包
2楼2011-02-12 16:08:33
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖

小木虫(金币+0.2):抢了个小板凳,给个红包
3楼2011-02-12 16:12:25
已阅   回复此楼   关注TA 给TA发消息 送TA红花 TA的回帖
相关版块跳转 我要订阅楼主 zjdaniel 的主题更新
普通表情 高级回复 (可上传附件)
最具人气热帖推荐 [查看全部] 作者 回/看 最后发表
[考研] 22408 344分 求调剂 一志愿 华电计算机技术 +4 solanXXX 2026-03-20 4/200 2026-03-20 23:49 by alg094825
[考研] 304求调剂 +7 司空. 2026-03-18 7/350 2026-03-20 23:08 by JourneyLucky
[考研] 324求调剂 +5 lucky呀呀呀鸭 2026-03-20 5/250 2026-03-20 22:30 by 促天成
[考研] 287求调剂 +7 晨昏线与星海 2026-03-19 8/400 2026-03-20 22:19 by JourneyLucky
[考研] 265求调剂 +12 梁梁校校 2026-03-19 13/650 2026-03-20 21:01 by 无际的草原
[考研] 一志愿北京化工大学0703化学318分,有科研经历,求调剂 +4 一瓶苯甲酸 2026-03-14 4/200 2026-03-20 20:36 by fen_rao
[考研] 261求B区调剂,科研经历丰富 +3 牛奶很忙 2026-03-20 4/200 2026-03-20 19:34 by JourneyLucky
[考博] 招收博士1-2人 +3 QGZDSYS 2026-03-18 3/150 2026-03-20 11:58 by 呱呱呱呱叫
[考研] 286分人工智能专业请求调剂愿意跨考! +3 lemonzzn 2026-03-17 4/200 2026-03-20 11:04 by lemonzzn
[考研] 304求调剂 +5 曼殊2266 2026-03-18 5/250 2026-03-20 09:00 by ZHANG0tao
[考研] 328求调剂,英语六级551,有科研经历 +4 生物工程调剂 2026-03-16 12/600 2026-03-19 11:10 by 生物工程调剂
[考研] 一志愿985,本科211,0817化学工程与技术319求调剂 +10 Liwangman 2026-03-15 10/500 2026-03-19 10:25 by 无际的草原
[考研] 354求调剂 +4 Tyoumou 2026-03-18 7/350 2026-03-18 21:45 by Tyoumou
[考研] 085601专硕,总分342求调剂,地区不限 +5 share_joy 2026-03-16 5/250 2026-03-18 14:48 by haxia
[考研] 297求调剂 +8 戏精丹丹丹 2026-03-17 8/400 2026-03-18 14:30 by laoshidan
[考研] 0703化学336分求调剂 +6 zbzihdhd 2026-03-15 7/350 2026-03-18 09:53 by zhukairuo
[考研] 290求调剂 +3 p asserby. 2026-03-15 4/200 2026-03-17 16:35 by wangkm
[论文投稿] 有没有大佬发小论文能带我个二作 +3 增锐漏人 2026-03-17 4/200 2026-03-17 09:26 by xs74101122
[考研] 考研调剂 +3 淇ya_~ 2026-03-17 5/250 2026-03-17 09:25 by Winj1e
[考研] 机械专硕325,寻找调剂院校 +3 y9999 2026-03-15 5/250 2026-03-16 19:58 by y9999
信息提示
请填处理意见