An Open Letter/Rant to the College Application Process
I hate the College Application Process
Very hot take, I know. But why I think the application process is so unbelievably broken and contrived goes far beyond just the amount of stress it causes(which is a lot).
I hate the fact that I feel like my whole life has been structured around winning the “get accepted by a big name university” game.
Now this may not be true for all who read this, but from my life experience, it would be hard to deny this fact. All my extracurricular activities, the classes I took, the reason why my parents moved to Naperville and pushed me in the way that they have: My parents did it all so that they could give me the best chance to go to the best university, the first step of securing a better future. Now while this is very admirable on the behalf of my parents, it does not take away from the rather sad reality that everything I do with my time is not based on whether I want to or not. It’s a matter of whether it is worth my time doing a certain activity at the expense of doing something else that could look better on a college application.
Perhaps it’s a product of the hypercompetitive environment that I was raised in with my parents wanting me to be just as high achieving as those around me. Perhaps it’s a result of kids who founded businesses at 13 or created nuclear reactors in their garage getting into MIT or Harvard which pushed a narrative of needing to be insanely intelligent to have a chance of getting into a hyper selective university. Perhaps it’s a result of these big name universities feeding into a marketing strategy that preys on the weak, feeble, and incredibly stressed out minds of adolescents and their parents while simultaneously rejecting thousands of applicants to give the aura of “prestige”. Or maybe it’s a combination of all of those, along with a list of potentially hundreds of other reasons.
Either way the reasons for why I (and many of my peers) have ended up in the situation of the present day doesn’t change the reality of what we are: rats in maze, begging to be picked by a hand that ultimately takes hundreds of thousands of dollars from us in exchange for an overpriced education and the “opportunity” to make important connections and potentially land a well paying job.
This may sound very tin-foil hat-like, and honestly it is. Regardless, it doesn’t change the fact that I’ve been a player in the game, I am still a player, and I won’t get to “leave” until I finally commit to a university.
The decisions I have made, and still currently are making, are purely for the purpose of looking as good on an application and fluffing up my resume. But the fact that having a resume that looks like that of a working adult at 17 is expected is ridiculous. As for the essays, it would be a joke to think that what I have written in my college essays are honest and legit, written with any other intention than to get me into university.
All those reasons, however, are nothing compared to the part I have the most issue with: I don’t even know what’s going to happen after I get into college. The deepest understanding of it that I have is that I go through schooling, hopefully apply for a bunch of jobs, maybe find one that accepts me and pays a decent amount of money, then work for the rest of my life. Maybe it’s because I’m the oldest child in my family and my parents are immigrants and that’s the only narrative I’ve been fed. Maybe it’s because I just don’t socialize enough. Maybe it’s because I just haven’t lived long enough or had enough experience, but the fact of the matter is that this has always been the path that I have been told to go down, and who am I to say no.
Of course, universities being the businesses that they are, jump into this narrative, claiming their doors are the shining golden pathways to a better future, and perhaps they are. But whatever rational or promise of the future doesn’t help eb the absolute misery that is the College Application Process.
Thank you for reading my uncalled for, very biased and childish rant. I need to go write more college essays, and I’m sure you do too.