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Jan082009

POSTED AT 07:33 AM

Stealth Applicants
 
 
I came across an interesting article recently in ASCA’s School Counselor journal. “Tracking Trends” was written by Robert Bardwell and his article was basically a review of the latest stuff related to college admissions. I felt vindicated that most of what the article contained was not news to me. However, there was one minor point that struck me. In a section on how technology was impacting college applications Bardwell used a term that was new to me. The term that was struck me was ‘stealth applicant.’
 
 
Admittedly my first impression of the term stealth applicant was that of total coolness. When I was a kid, stealth technology was just emerging and it was HOT. I remember seeing an Air Force PR video of the B2 Stealth Bomber and having my jaw drop. Every boy wanted one for Christmas. Stealth was IN.
 

Anyway, stealth is NOT cool when it comes to being a college applicant. It does not mean that you sneak your way into a college admissions office with your ninja skills and adjust a school’s decision in your favor under cover of darkness. No, stealth is not a good thing.

 
Let’s see what Bardwell has to say about the stealth applicant:
 
“…one [term] for which the application is the first contact the student has with the institution – no visit, no inquiry, no face-to-face conversation with an admissions staffer. …it raises the question of how committed this student is to the institution.”
 
Now does that sound good to you?
 
If you answered NO then give yourself a cookie. If you answered YES, well… read on.
 
When possible, you want admissions to see your personal interest in their program. As one admissions counselor I know states, “I admit people not numbers.” This does not mean that you have to stalk admissions counselors. A restraining order probably isn’t going to help your admissions prospects. Some of the little things you do as part of your research can help you here: attending a representative’s visit to the school, filling out one of their interest surveys (postcard OR online), visiting the school, posting a question on the school’s admissions blog. It’s the little things here. I’m not advocating gimmicks. Gimmicks historically don’t work.
 
The BIG tag line here is that you want to research the colleges you’re applying to and allow admissions to know that you’re an interested applicant.
 
Bardwell, R. (2008). Tracking Trends. School Counselor, 46 (2), 32-37.
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