Admissions and financial aid policies at liberal arts colleges
have changed dramatically since 1955. Through the 1950s, most
colleges in the United States enrolled fewer than 1000 students,
nearly all of whom were white. Few colleges were truly selective in
their admissions; they accepted most students who applied. In the
1960s, as the children of the baby boom reached college age and
both federal and institutional financial aid programs expanded,
many more students began to apply to college. For the first time,
liberal arts colleges were faced with an abundance of applicants,
which raised new questions. What criteria would they use to select
students? How would they award financial aid? The answers to these
questions were shaped by financial and educational considerations
as well as by the struggles for civil rights and gender equality
that swept across the nation. The colleges' answers also proved
crucial to their futures, as the years since the mid-1970s have
shown. When the influx of baby boom students slowed, colleges began
to recruit aggressively in order to maintain their class sizes. In
the past decade, financial aid has become another tool that
colleges use to compete for the best students.
By tracing the development of competitive admission and
financial aid policies at a selected group of liberal arts
colleges, "Crafting a Class" explores how institutional decisions
reflect and respond to broad demographic, economic, political, and
social forces. Elizabeth Duffy and Idana Goldberg closely studied
sixteen liberal arts colleges in Massachusetts and Ohio. At each
college, they not only collected empirical data on admissions,
enrollment, and financial aid trends, but they also examined
archival materials and interviewed current and former
administrators. Duffy and Goldberg have produced an authoritative
and highly readable account of some of the most important changes
that have taken place in American higher education during the
tumultuous decades since the mid-1950s." Crafting a Class" will
interest all readers who are concerned with the past and future
directions of higher education in the United States.
Originally published in 1997.
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technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
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