Representatives go beyond statistics to sell the Tufts identity
Representatives go beyond statistics to sell the Tufts identity
Published: Thursday, September 27, 2012
Updated: Thursday, September 27, 2012 01:09
Zhuangchen JJ zhou for The Tufts Daily
Admissions officers, student representatives use a unique strategy to sell the personality of Tufts.
The admissions process for prospective students at any university is chock full of flattering statistics, gratifying rankings and self−proclaimed assets. At Tufts, the undergraduate student body of 5,194 students −− about 16 percent of whom are international −− and a student to faculty ratio of nine to one may be among the most sought−after facts by prospective students and their parents. Yet when push comes to shove, the Office of Admissions −− through its’ employees, representatives and student surrogates −− has one job: to sell Tufts. And that means looking past the statistics and numbers.
When Admissions Officer Justin Pike addresses high school students, his primary goal is to be helpful.
“Many seniors in high school meet with a parade of college reps that focus on facts and figures which tend to blur together,” Pike said. “What are the students like? Why is it actually cool to be smart here? What makes a Tufts student interesting to talk to? If I can shed light on those questions, I see a lot of eyes light up for Tufts.”
When Larry Bacow stepped in as president 11 years ago, Tufts branded itself as a good school that was medium−sized and near, but not in, a city.
“It wasn’t an identity,” Associate Director of Admissions Daniel Grayson said. Grayson, a Tufts alumnus himself, reflected on his experience from the other side.
“When I arrived [as a student] in 2002, the admissions office had virtually no message,” he said. “When I did my campus tour and [information] session, I can honestly say those things made no impact on me whatsoever when I was choosing my college.”
As Tufts began to search for its identity, Bacow and Admissions did not attempt to create one from scratch, instead looking to articulate what was already here, according to Grayson.
To distinguish itself from other top institutions in the Boston area and beyond, Admissions must sell a personality and environment unique to Tufts. They accomplish this by selling the personalities of the admissions officers themselves.
“I go into school visits and try the best I can to represent Tufts as a place that is smart and interesting by being myself smart and interesting, with surprisingly little hard detail about the school,” Grayson said. “The goal is to simulate meeting a bunch of Tufts students [and to] do that myself.”
First−year students recalled the application process and fond memories of their interaction with Tufts’ representatives.
“When [the admissions officer] answered questions, he talked about the a cappella groups and the weird traditions like the cannon, making it seem more like a place to be than just an academic institution,” freshman Annie Kolle said. “He was really funny and definitely on the weird side, in a good way. Very quirky, enthusiastic and fun.”
An interdisciplinary approach is the cornerstone of Tufts’ academic environment, and Admissions looks to draw upon this important characteristic to differentiate itself.
Freshman Seth Gray described Grayson’s memorable visit to his high school last fall. Grayson provided a list of undergraduate majors and asked students to pick any two from the list.
“I picked geology and history, and he proceeded to show me how I could study both at the same time,” Gray said. This strategy not only revealed the diversity of classes and academic opportunities offered at Tufts, but engaged students in an interactive way.
“I don’t really remember facts, but it’s the one college talk I remember,” Gray said.
As an engineering student, senior tour guide John Gill noted this interdisciplinary approach as a major reason for choosing Tufts himself. He emphasizes this point on his tours by talking about the Experimental College.
“You’re not coming here just to be an engineer,” Gill said. “You’re taking classes all over the board, and the ExCollege is a really great way to do that.”
Diversity is a second point Admissions looks to promote, but not in the traditional sense of the word.
“The main thing about Tufts is [that] at my high school everyone wanted to be the same, but here everyone wants to be different,” Gray said.
When Gray visited Tufts as a prospective freshman, a Shakespeare flash mob broke out in Dewick−MacPhie Dining Center while he was eating lunch.
“People were reenacting the balcony scene of ‘Romeo and Juliet,’” he recalled. “At first I assumed everyone was going to start laughing and stare, but when I realized everyone was just watching, I was like, ‘this is awesome.’”
Sophomore tour guide Abbie Cohen emphasized the importance of a student body with a unique and fun collection of interests.
“I always stress how many various opportunities Tufts has, because I know that each one will connect with a different student on my tour in a different way,” Cohen said.
Tufts may have an ethnically diverse student body, but Admissions is working to promote the intellectual diversity that more appropriately represents what makes the Tufts community unique, Grayson said.
“As much as possible, I try to describe diversity [not as] a set of identifiers −− things you can check off on a census form −− but to describe the reason it’s important, [which] is intellectual diversity,” Grayson said.
Qualities such as race and socioeconomic status can influence an individual’s worldview, but they aren’t the only factors that matter, according to Grayson.
The Office of Undergraduate Admissions, in its search to embody the Tufts community, looks for ways to be distinctive. One way they have achieved this in the past is through the introduction of a new supplement to the application two years ago, which gave prospective students the opportunity to post a YouTube video as part of their application.
Be the first to comment on this article! Log in to Comment
You must be logged in to comment on an article. Not already a member? Register now

is a member of the 

