UC system to weed out fabricators
Deirdre Newman
Prospective students beware: the University of California system
will randomly start checking admission applications to make sure you
are telling the truth about your extracurricular activities and
personal statements.
Starting with applications for fall 2003, the UC system will
spot-check applications from throughout the state. The effort is
geared to maintain a high level of public trust and will be done
systemwide, even though two pilot programs found no evidence of any
lying, said Barbara Sawrey, chair of the Board of Admissions and
Relations with Schools.
While Sawrey justifies the effort as the “appropriate path to take
given the large number of applications we have,” UC Irvine BOARS
member James Givens said he does not believe it is justified.
“If the question is, are we going to miss a huge number of
students fabricating if we didn’t do it, I don’t think we really need
this to ferret out dishonest applicants, but to make the case that we
are guarding against falsified applications,” Givens said.
The UC system already verifies the academic information on
students’ applications, including transcripts, said Hanan Eisenman,
media coordinator for UC system admissions.
The idea to randomly spot-check applications came out of the first
analysis of the UC system’s policy of comprehensive review, which
began last year. Comprehensive review means that UC system officials
look at the entire file for every single applicant instead of just
relying on academic information to admit about 50% of freshmen. The
analysis will be presented to the UC Regents today.
The pilot spot-checking program -- conducted at UC San Diego and
the Office of the President -- found no evidence of lying, Sawrey
said. But the program will go systemwide to dispel the public
perception that dishonesty permeates student applications, Sawrey
said.
“There certainly have been reports in the media that have
questioned whether or not students are all reporting things honestly,
and we believe they are,” Sawrey said. “It would seem the small pilot
project is not enough to satisfy the naysayers, even though we found
nothing there.”
It will be up to the applicants to submit proof such as a
certificate of participation for clubs or a letter from a music
coach.
The number of files to be spot-checked has not been determined
yet, but they will be drawn from the central Office of the President,
Sawrey said.
Sawrey said she doesn’t know of any other schools in the country
that are using the random spot-checking process.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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