Future Undergrads: Colleges are Cyber-Stalking You and There's Nothing You Can Do About It
LatestAround 25% of admissions officers at the country’s top 500 colleges cyber-stalk applicants using websites like Facebook and Google, and more than one-third of them say they’ve found information that they’ve used against prospective students — up from 12% last year.
“My advice to students is to be smart and think twice about what you post online,” Jeff Olson, vice president of data science at Kaplan Test Prep, which released the new statistics, told the Wall Street Journal. Well, yes, DUH. Every college counselor/teacher/parent in the nation should teach students how to Google themselves (sure, that’ll also foster a generation of young adults who are even more narcissistic than millennials, but we can tackle that issue later) and remind them that whatever results show up for them may potentially show up for colleges, too.
But Olson’s advice is becoming increasingly less helpful as college officials grow more adept at (and more comfortable with the idea of) web sleuthing. It’s easy to blame the statistics on teenagers who, despite story after story about the internet fucking people over, still don’t see the problem with posting Facebook photos of “the morning after LOL” with bongs strewn about or going on Twitter rants about how “Britney is a ho!!!!!!!!!” But admissions officials told the WSJ that they sometimes Google students after red flags are raised in interviews or recommendations and subsequently judge them on less controllable aspects of their online presence beyond the amount of red cups in their profile pics.
Colleges said they had turned up cases of plagiarism, accusations of sexual assault, bullying, alcohol and drug use thanks to the internet. “We leave it up to the individual admissions officers, and if something gives them cause to scratch their head, then they do it,” said Paul Marthers, vice president for enrollment at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Martha Blevins Allman, dean of admissions at Wake Forest University, said the college doesn’t use search results “as a single indicator and we don’t search blindly, but if we have other suspicions, we will look.”