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| Economic Pressure Could Make Their Jobs Tougher, Admissions Experts Say | ||
| By Beckie Supiano Chroncle of Higher Education | ||
| A weakened economy may exacerbate the challenges admissions professionals face, experts said here on Thursday. Among other concerns, they said, they expected sticker price to become a bigger concern for more families, and more government oversight as a result. | ||
| Those comments came during a discussion sponsored by the marketing company TargetX at Seattles Central Public Library before the opening later in the day of the National Association for College Admission Counseling national conference. | ||
| Economic pressures may bring a cease-fire in the so-called arms race among colleges to offer new facilities and amenities, and force colleges to focus more on what programs they offer, some of the officials attending the discussion said. Or maybe not: We all lament the Club Med-ing of college campuses, but we all want full-paying students, said Randy Doss, vice president for enrollment services at Guilford College, in North Carolina. And full-paying students demand these amenities. | ||
| But many students dont pay the full sticker price, and some colleges have become trapped in a cycle of discounting tuition at a rate they can't afford to sustain. Some colleges will either have to plan on enrolling fewer students or else improve prospective students readiness for college so the overall applicant pool is larger. | ||
| More focus among potential students and their families on the cost of attending college may also change the approach of admissions professionals. | ||
| If price is going to become more important, fit is going to be less important, and were going to have to be more sales people, said Deana Ison, senior associate director of admissions at Transylvania University, in Kentucky. | ||
| The salesperson role of admissions officers, whose job titles may include the term counselor, or recruiter, or even area manager, is a controversial one, but most of the officials in the room acknowledged that they were comfortable using the term customer to describe applicants. The faculty members at their colleges, however, are not. | ||
| The economic downturn may also reduce families abilities to make all-important campus visits, the group acknowledged: all the more reason to ramp up their online presence. | ||



