Welcome to College Admissions World, where YouTube is cutting edge
Legally Blonde is a way smarter movie
than anyone gives it credit. When Reese Witherspoon’s ultra-ditzy,
fashion-obsessed character woos the admissions officers at Harvard Law
School with a home video in which she prances around in a bikini, she’s
really just making a preemptive and highly savvy parody of what’s
happening at Tufts this year.
Two stories have popped up this week – the first in the Globe, the second now floating atop the New York Times’s most e-mailed list
– about the option Tufts has begun giving its applicants to make short
YouTube videos showcasing talents or quirks as a supplement to academic
records and recommendations. [ /!\ SPOILER ALERT /!\ ] High school
seniors really do how to use the Internet! And 1,000 of them sent in
videos this year as part of their Tufts applications.
Judging
by the tone of the Globe and Times articles, the Ivory Tower is a
magical world in which run-of-the-mill Internet activity – making goofy
home videos and posting them online – becomes a novel and charming
expression of talent and creativity.
“I thought, ‘If this kid
applied to Tufts, I’d admit him in a minute, without anything else,’”
the school's Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Lee Coffin told the
Times, describing his reaction to a YouTube video that inspired his
decision to change up the application process. (Although he said in
another interview that even a brilliant video can’t fully supplement a
terrible academic record. Make up your mind, Coffin!) The Globe labeled
the influx of YouTube admissions clips as a “creative flood,” and one
excited applicant-turned-video-star said the whole idea was “very
cool.” Another explained that the video option inspired a decision to
apply to the school in the first place. Tufts Class of 2014 T-shirt
slogan forthcoming: “I turned down RISD to be a Jumbo!”
Thanks
to the democratizing forces of this here mystical Web, these little
application gems aren’t bound by the usual fortress of secrecy that is
the college admissions office. They’re accessible on YouTube with a
quick search of the phrase “Tufts application,”
and we’ve culled a group of some of the finest clips for your viewing
pleasure. Provided these kids had checks for 50k a year to throw at
you, wouldn’t their videos convince you to let them into YOUR school?
Who knew that “burger hopping,” soccer, lacrosse, band, family, paintball, team work [sic], video games, school spirit, “more burger hopping” and FUN could all fit into one minute of a Creed song?
Um,
college isn’t usually a prerequisite for the kind of rap stardom this
kid’ll be facing, but I guess it’s nice to have something to fall back
on.
Okay, this one’s actually pretty clever.
Most
journalists toil for years without the slightest hope of making it onto
the pages of the Times. Thanks to Amelia Downs, reigning queen of video
essays, we know that all it takes is a simple combination of “being a
nerd and dancing.”
*DISCLAIMER: The author of this post is
a senior at Tufts University who probably didn’t even know what YouTube
was when she applied four years ago.