November 20, 2014

CNBC: “Toning Down the Tweets Just in Case Colleges Pry”

The Houston Chronicle: “Applying to college? Clean up your Facebook profile”

AllFacebook: “More College Admissions Officers Are Finding Fewer Red Flags on Applicants’ Facebook Profiles”

T.H.E Journal: “Survey: Admissions Officers Check Social Media Pages, Students Don’t Care”

The Daily Pennsylvanian (University of Pennsylvania): “College applicants clean up social media to improve chances of admissions” 

Campus Technology: “Admissions Officers Check Social Media Pages, Students Don’t Care”

The Bulletin: “Applicants Toning Down the Tweets so Colleges Can’t Pry”

Times Union: “College applicants clean up Web images”

GeekyCrunch: “College Applicants to Sanitize Social Media Profile”

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: “Survey says more college admissions officers checking out prospective students’ media pages”

The Times- Picayune: “In evaluating applicants, college admissions officers turn to Facebook, Twitter”

CBS – Albuquerque: “More colleges looking at students’ social media”

Lextalk (Lexis Nexis): “Are law schools seeing sunshine and blue skies in their future?”

Kaplan Test Prep Survey: Percentage of College Admissions Officers Who Visit Applicants’ Social Networking Pages Continues to Grow — But Most Students Shrug

Press Contacts: Russell Schaffer, russell.schaffer@kaplan.com, 212.453.7538
Twitter: @KapTestNews@KaplanSATACT

New York, NY (November 20, 2014) — Over a third (35%) of college admissions officers have visited an applicant’s social media page to learn more about them, according to Kaplan Test Prep’s 2014 survey of college admissions officers.*  This is the highest percentage since Kaplan first began tracking the issue in 2008, when just under one in ten admissions officers reported doing so. But even as this practice becomes more commonplace, college admissions officers are actually finding fewer things online that negatively impact applicants’ chances — just 16% reported doing so this year, down from 30% last year and 35% two years ago.

“As social media has evolved from early versions of MySpace and Facebook to a broad ecosystem of platforms and apps that are a daily part of millions of people’s lives worldwide, we’re seeing greater acceptance of social media use in the college admissions process. This means admissions officers are increasingly open to what they once viewed as a dubious practice, while teens have come to terms with the fact that their digital trails are for the most part easily searchable, followable and sometimes judged,” said Christine Brown, executive director of K12 and college prep programs for Kaplan Test Prep.

A separate Kaplan survey of over 500 high school students shows that 58% describe their social networking pages as “fair game” for admissions officers.** In fact, 35% of students said that if a college admissions officer were to visit their social networking page(s), what they found would actually help their chances of getting in.  Only 3% said it would hurt their chances; 62% said it would make no difference.  And even as schools have adopted social media for recruiting purposes, some savvy teens see it as another channel for promoting themselves. Kaplan’s survey also finds that while most students are indifferent to the role of social media in the admissions process, at least 18% plan to use online channels to help improve their college admissions chances.

“There’s no doubt social media has become increasingly a part of the admissions process, but students should recognize that it still plays only a peripheral role.  The majority of admissions officers are not looking at Facebook for applicant information, and even those who are typically do so as an anomaly — because they were flagged, either positively or negatively, to particular applicants,” said Brown. “Admissions chances are still overwhelmingly decided by the traditional factors of high school GPA, standardized test scores, letters of recommendation, personal essays and extracurricular activities.  Applicants’ online personas are really a wild card in the admissions process: the bottom line for students is that what you post online likely won’t get you into college, but it just might keep you out.”

*For the 2014 survey, 403 admissions officers from the nation’s top national, regional and liberal arts colleges and universities – as compiled from U.S. News & World Report – were polled by telephone between July and August 2014.

**From a Kaplan e-survey conducted in October 2014 of 520 students from across the United States, who took a Kaplan SAT course.

About Kaplan Test Prep

Kaplan Test Prep (www.kaptest.com)  is a premier provider of educational and career services for individuals, schools and businesses. Established in 1938, Kaplan is the world leader in the test prep industry. With a comprehensive menu of online offerings as well as a complete array of print books and digital products, Kaplan offers preparation for more than 90 standardized tests, including entrance exams for secondary school, college and graduate school, as well as professional licensing exams for attorneys, physicians and nurses.  Kaplan also provides private tutoring and graduate admissions consulting services. Additionally, Kaplan operates new economy skills training (NEST) bootcamps designed to provide immersive training in skills that are in high demand in today’s job market and prepare participants for hire.

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November 19, 2014

The New York Times: “College Applicants Sanitizing Social Media Profiles as More Schools Pry”

Campus Circle: “Report: More College Applicants cleaning Up Social Media Profiles”

Graduate Guide: “Should MBA Applicants Take the GRE or GMAT?”

Admit This!: “Long- Range SAT Planning”

November 18, 2014

University Parent: “Time for a social media audit”

November 14, 2014

Knowledge @Wharton High School: “How Clean Is Your Digital Footprint”

Kaplan Test Prep’s 2014 Survey of Law School Admissions Officers

law-schoolTo ensure that students and their parents receive accurate and up-to-date information on trends in the law school admissions process, Kaplan Test Prep annually surveys admissions officers from the 200+ ABA-accredited law schools across the United States. The survey data collected helps Kaplan provided informed insights to the tens of thousands of  aspiring graduate school students we work with each year.  Click Kaplan Test Prep’s 2014 Survey of Law School Admissions Officers for the results.  Here are some highlights: 

 

  • Almost half (46%) of law school admissions officers express confidence that their law school will see an increase in applications for the 2015–2016 school year.
  • Nearly a quarter of law schools say they are likely to reduce their class size for the 2015-2016 application cycle.
  • A plurality of law school admissions officers (33%) say that a prospective student’s LSAT score is the first piece of their application that they look at.

 

November 11, 2014

The Varsity (University of Toronto): “Social media not a factor for U of T Law, Medicine”

November 13, 2014

The Diamondback (University of Maryland): “Though less students are applying to law school, UMD remains a top feeder”

Nurse.com: “Survey: Nursing grads would feel unsafe treating Ebola patients”

November 11, 2014

U.S. News University Directory: “Students Choose SAT Over ACT Because of Misinformation” 

MedCity News: “Ebola Watch: 400 Sierra Leone health workers on strike”

Kaplan Survey: A Majority of Recent Nursing School Graduates Would Feel Unsafe Treating Ebola Patients

Press Contacts: Russell Schaffer, russell.schaffer@kaplan.com, 212.453.7538
Twitter: @KapTestNews@KaplanNCLEX

New York, NY (November 12, 2014) —  As the Ebola outbreak highlights the role of nurses on health care’s front lines, a just released Kaplan Test Prep survey of over 2,200 recent nursing school graduates* (all of whom have clinical experience and most of whom are already registered nurses) shows that 81% say that the duty of a medical professional sometimes requires placing him or herself in danger in the interest of saving lives. However, survey results also show that these recent graduates view the disease with understandable trepidation, should they be called upon to treat it:

  • Unprepared: Nearly 6 in 10 recent nursing school graduates (57%) say they feel unprepared to safely care for patients stricken with Ebola.
  • Unsafe:  55% say they’d feel personally unsafe if they were required to treat patients with Ebola.
  • Few Volunteers: Given their concerns about lack of preparation and personal safety,  just 29% of new nurses say they would volunteer to treat Ebola patients.
  • Out of Africa: About a quarter (24%) of nursing school graduates surveyed say they’d travel to Africa to treat Ebola patients and prevent the disease from spreading.

“Nurses are among the most giving of all professionals, which explains why Gallup consistently finds that Americans view them as the most honest and ethical members of our workforce. But a disease for which there is so much misunderstanding is bound to cause apprehension among even the most compassionate of nurses – especially when the only people in the United States who contracted Ebola have been healthcare professionals,” said Susan Sanders, DNP, RN, NEA-BC and vice president of nursing, Kaplan Test Prep, who served as a chief emergency room nurse during the early years of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. “Their concerns underscore the need for better education, improved preparation and enhanced safety precautions around this disease.”

For more information about Kaplan’s survey or to arrange an interview with Susan Sanders, please contact Russell Schaffer at russell.schaffer@kaplan.com or 212.453.7538.

*From an e-survey conducted in October 2014 of 2,228 recent nursing school graduates who took a NCLEX-RN® exam prep course with Kaplan Test Prep.

About Kaplan Test Prep

Kaplan Test Prep (www.kaptest.com)  is a premier provider of educational and career services for individuals, schools and businesses. Established in 1938, Kaplan is the world leader in the test prep industry. With a comprehensive menu of online offerings as well as a complete array of print books and digital products, Kaplan offers preparation for more than 90 standardized tests, including entrance exams for secondary school, college and graduate school, as well as professional licensing exams for attorneys, physicians and nurses.  Kaplan also provides private tutoring and graduate admissions consulting services. Additionally, Kaplan operates new economy skills training (NEST) bootcamps designed to provide immersive training in skills that are in high demand in today’s job market and prepare participants for hire.

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