<p>As the vice president of Dickinson College and the parent of a college junior and a recent graduate, I would like to weigh in on this issue first to clarify Dickinsons position and then to comment in general on what the college admission process has become.</p>
<p>First, there are about 650 undergraduate liberal arts colleges in the US. That Dickinson is generally considered to be among the top 10% of those colleges (whether ranked by US News or not) hardly makes the college a sore loser nor does it make it irrelevant. To the latter point, it is one of only 5 colleges founded before 1800 that is still a small college today, and was one of the original colleges that defined American higher education for the future during the revolutionary era. (I hasten to add this, but to respond to the sore loser assertion, Dickinson actually moved up 4 places in USNews from last year and is ranked by Princeton Review as #11 in the college library category, whatever that means).</p>
<p>The rising prominence of USNews and other rankings is symptomatic of a larger issue our desire as a society to distill complex information quickly without having to spend a lot of time doing the work ourselves. The order in which colleges are ranked is, to the public, a surrogate for their quality and that is inaccurate and quite simplistic. For example, Dickinsons endowment is the 42nd largest among all liberal arts colleges. It is no coincidence that USNews ranks the college at #41. The USNews rankings correlate most significantly with institutional wealth, not with HOW an institution spends its resources (a more accurate indication of quality). </p>
<p>By the way, Dickinson does not require standardized tests for admission, though 90% of our applicants do submit scores and we do use the test as one criterion in the admission process. We have taken this stance for the past ten years precisely for the same reasons we now will not promote USNews or other rankings on our website or in admissions literature: the SAT can be used by admission offices as a shortcut to the measurement of student quality and fit, just as institutional wealth is used as a shortcut in the rankings. We wanted to send a clear message to the members of our community that Dickinson will not do this.</p>
<p>I truly believe that when colleges and others bemoan the USNews rankings, it not so much the hatred of the rankings that motivates, but a general frustration with a college admission process that has become commercialized and stress-producing for students and for colleges. We have, particularly in the East, lost sight of the notion of institutional fit finding the right college for the right student. It has become all about rankings and prestige and window stickers. Colleges share equal responsibility with students and families for this state of affairs.</p>
<p>One final point as illustration. In my last of ten years as the dean of enrollment at Johns Hopkins, a parent cornered me at an open house to ask about the political science department. When I told her that the chair of the department would be available later in the day, she announced that they couldnt stay because they were driving to North Carolina and that they were only going to apply to top ten universities anyway. Hopkins was ranked number 15 in USNews that year (1998). Of course, the joke was on them: when the rankings came out in 1999, Hopkins had risen to number 7. Point its not the rankings, but how we use them to guide our decisions that has become the problem. Dickinson is simply saying we will not contribute to their misuse by congratulating ourselves publicly for being among the top colleges in the country. </p>
<p>I hope this helps to clarify our position (which was meant only to be shared within our community, but which has obviously found its way into public).</p>
<p>Robert J. Massa
Vice President
Enrollment & College Relations
Dickinson College
<a href=“mailto:massa@dickinson.edu”>massa@dickinson.edu</a></p>