Globalization — What It Means for Colleges and Students

Via the Huffington Post:

In the late nineteenth century, U.S. colleges and universities had to respond to a new German invention called graduate education, and the choices they made continue to define their identity. Harvard, for example, decided to embrace graduate education across the board, from PhDs to medicine and business, and went on to become an all-inclusive university. Princeton, on the other hand, stayed on the graduate-level sidelines and to this day has only modest graduate and professional programs. Two universities — Clark and Johns Hopkins — were born as graduate-only institutions.

Today’s equivalent of the nineteenth-century German challenge is globalization. How each of the country’s 2,200 four-year colleges and universities chooses to confront the fact that higher education can no longer be confined within national borders will shape their future identities.

As with the earlier challenge, universities are making very different choices, and the decisions they make are relevant to college-bound high school seniors looking for a school that will prepare them to take their place in a global environment.

When it comes to global ambitions, New York University is undoubtedly the most ambitious. NYU opened an undergraduate campus in Abu Dhabi and is building another one in Shanghai. Though tight-lipped about its strategic plans, NYU clearly wants to have a global academic presence — let’s call it the Starbucks of higher education.

Duke University already has a medical facility in Singapore and is constructing a new campus in Kunshan, located outside Shanghai, as part of its aspirations to be a “globally networked university.” With a new campus in Kigali, Rwanda, Carnegie Mellon expects to become the first U.S. research university to offer degree programs in Africa. Yale will open a new liberal arts college in the fall of 2013 in partnership with the National University of Singapore.

Setting up a new campus on foreign soil is, of course, only one way to deal with the challenge of globalization. Cornell University has teamed up with Technion-Israel Institute of Technology as part of its bid to build an “applied science campus” on Roosevelt Island in Manhattan. Hundreds of U.S. colleges and universities have negotiated partnerships with universities in other countries to run particular programs. A good description of the many options can be found in Ben Wildavsky’s readable book, The Great Brain Race: How Global Universities Are Reshaping the World (Princeton University Press).

For faculty members, globalization is old stuff. An academic researcher today is just as likely to work with a colleague halfway around the world as she is to team up with someone down the hall. Ideas are as oblivious to national borders as hip-hop, smartphone apps or pork belly futures.

So what does all this talk of globalization mean for students? As editor of the Fiske Guide to Colleges for the last 30 years, I’ve noted that colleges and students alike are showing more interest in globalization in two important ways.

The first has to do with the importance of diversity. Given the changing nature of the global workplace, students are seeking educational environments in which they will have opportunities to work elbow to elbow with persons from very different backgrounds, including those from other countries and cultures. Responding to these demands, almost all of the 300-plus schools in the Fiske Guide have been increasing the number of foreign nationals in their undergraduate bodies. (The other attraction of foreign students, of course, is that many of them bring hard currency.)

Some universities have been at this for a long time. The University of Southern California, with 8,615 international students, has traditionally topped the list in terms of numbers, followed by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne (7,991) and, you guessed it, NYU (7,988). But some smaller schools are also notable. Mount Holyoke College has nearly 600 international students in a student body of 2,300.

The second reason has to do with study-abroad opportunities. It is hard for me to conceive of going through four years of college these days without trying to spend at least some time in a foreign setting. I’m not talking “tourism” with a thin academic veneer. I’m talking about putting yourself in a situation where you can peel away at least a layer or two of another culture and come to appreciate — and respect — the fact that persons from other countries think differently than we do and have very different values.

Once again, colleges are responding to growing student demand for building international experiences into their education. These opportunities range from short-term vacation or January term trips, where you take along your own professors, to semester- or year-long programs, where you take the deep plunge into the academic life of a foreign university and study alongside students from around the world.

Finances, of course, are always a consideration, but a growing number of colleges will let you study abroad at the same cost as you would pay at home — or even less — and many offer financial aid, as well. Until recently, it has been difficult for students in the sciences or engineering, with rigidly sequenced course requirements, to spend time abroad, but even this is changing. Georgia Tech, for instance, sends student overseas during the summer.

Then, of course, why not do your entire four years abroad? Fiske Guide to Colleges began adding write-ups on the leading Canadian schools a decade ago and then some from Great Britain, on the grounds that these English-speaking programs offer the equivalent of an education from an Ivy or flagship public university at a much lower cost. Who is to dispute the words of an American at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland who touted the virtues of studying in an international context and having “friends to crash with all over the world”?

Edward B. Fiske, former education editor of the New York Times, is author of the Fiske Guide to Colleges (Sourcebooks) and numerous other books on college admissions.

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Ted Fiske gives tips on how to get the most bang for your college buck.

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SAT Optional Schools

Two decades ago a small number of U.S. colleges and universities, including Bates and Bowdoin, decided that they would no longer require all applicants to submit SAT or ACT scores. They reasoned that there is a significant pool of bright students who can do quality academic work but who for one reason or another do not test well. A “test optional” policy would allow them to tap into this market.

Over the years the number of “test optional” schools has grown dramatically. The National Center for Fair and Open Testing (FairTest), a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based advocacy organization that is critical of standardized testing in general, has tracked this growth, and at press time its website (www.fairtest.org) listed 755 such colleges and universities. Reasons for this growing aversion to college admissions tests are many. The early test optional schools have been happy with the way the policy has worked out. The SAT has been a focus of repeated controversy, especially around incidents of scoring error. And perhaps most importantly, the whole field of “test prep” has spiraled out of control. Students and parents alike are tired of the anxiety surrounding prep courses—not to mention the financial cost of helping bolster the coffers of Kaplan or Princeton Review.

Until recently there was not much that students could do—especially if they hoped to be able to choose among a range of quality colleges. Over the last two or three years, however, a critical mass has emerged of quality liberal arts colleges and major state universities that are “test optional.” There are now 50 such institutions covered in the Fiske Guide. For the first time, students who wish to avoid getting involved in the admissions test rat race can do so but while still enjoying a range of colleges and universities from which to choose.

Accordingly, we have decided to begin publishing a list of those colleges and universities in the Guide that are “test optional.” We are not recommending that any particular student eschew college admissions tests and apply only to these schools. As a resource designed to help students and parents, we are simply pointing out that applicants now have that option.

In looking over the list below of “test optional” colleges and universities described in the Fiske Guide to Colleges 2011, please keep a couple of things in mind. First, most of them are large state universities or small liberal arts colleges. You won’t find many other types, including the Ivies or flagship publics. Second, keep in mind that there are different ways of being “test optional.” Some schools, for example, only exempt students who meet certain GPA or class rank criteria. Qualifications are noted in the footnotes. Finally, the test optional field is changing daily, so go to www.fairtest.org for updated information and, above all, confirm current policy with any school to which you are thinking of applying.

Source: Fiske Guide to Colleges 2011.

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Sizing Yourself Up Survey

With apologies to Socrates, knowing thyself is easier said than done. Most high school students can analyze a differential equation or a Shakespearean play with the greatest of ease, but when it comes to cataloging their own strengths, weaknesses, likes, and dislikes, many draw a blank. But self-knowledge is crucial to the matching process at the heart of a successful college search. Our 30-item survey offers a simple way to get a handle on some critical issues in college selection – and what sort of college may fit your preferences.

Print our Self-Quiz and find out where you belong.

Source: Fiske Guide to Colleges 2011.

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Fiske Guide Announces Best Buys

In the face of today’s skyrocketing tuition rates, students and families in all economic circumstances are looking for ways to get the best value for their educational dollar. Fortunately, there are some bargains to be found in higher education; it just takes a bit of shopping around with a little guidance along the way.

Private Best Buys

  • Adelphi University
  • Alfred University
  • Baylor University
  • Brigham Young University
  • Cooper Union
  • Cornell College
  • Deep Springs College
  • DePaul University
  • Drexel University
  • Elon University
  • Florida Southern College
  • Hendrix College
  • Illinois Institute of Technology
  • Juniata College
  • Marquette University
  • Millsaps College
  • Morehouse College
  • Olin College of Engineering
  • Presbyterian College
  • College of St. Benedict and St. John’s University
  • Saint Louis University
  • Spelman College
  • Trinity University (TX)
  • Wheaton College (IL)

Public Best Buys

  • University of Aberdeen (Great Britain)
  • Arizona State University
  • University of British Columbia (Canada)
  • Evergreen State College
  • University of Florida
  • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • University of Iowa
  • Iowa State University
  • University of Mary Washington
  • McGill University (Canada)
  • New College of Florida
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • North Carolina State University
  • Ohio University
  • University of Oregon
  • Oregon State University
  • Queen’s University (Canada)
  • University of St. Andrews (Great Britain)
  • SUNY—Geneseo
  • University of Toronto (Canada)
  • University of Washington
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Updates and Corrections

Updates and corrections to the Fiske Guide to Colleges 2010:

Colgate
The proportion of students from New York State was incorrectly reported. That proportion is 28 percent.

Loyola Marymount
In the fourth paragraph, the correct term for the CGI effect is “green screen” rather than “green bed.”

UC-Berkeley
An incorrect deadline is listed in the “If You Apply” section. The correct regular admissions deadline is November 30.

Duke University
The correct overlaps for Duke University are Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Stanford and the University of Pennsylvania.

Middlebury
The college requires applicants to submit test results from any one of the following: SAT I, three exams in different subjects from the SAT II, or the ACT. It does not accept AP or IB results in fulfillment of the testing requirement.

Olin College of Engineering
Due to the current economic situation, Olin has modified its commitment to providing a full-tuition merit scholarship to all accepted students — at least temporarily. Beginning with the 2010-11 academic year, these scholarships will be reduced by 50 percent for new students. For details see the college website: www.olin.edu.

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