Word: applicantã
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...class with a variety of racial identities, but rather with “a wide diversity of backgrounds, experiences, and talents.” The first two of these three characteristics are certainly shaped by race, but they are not encapsulated by it. Rather, it’s an applicant??s background—in the broadest sense—with which the admissions process ought to be concerned...
Recruiting at Harvard does not streamline unqualified applicants into the college. What it does do, however, is extend admissions’ ability to gather information about prospective students. Through coaches, who have a far better vantage point from which to judge an applicant??s character through commitment, dedication, and work ethic, admissions gains a perspective they could never otherwise achieve. In other words, admissions is better because of recruiting, not worse...
While the business schools at Carnegie Mellon, Duke, and MIT also chose to reject all applicants who had tried to see their admissions files, Stanford’s and Dartmouth’s schools took a different tack, electing not to take action until considering each applicant??s explanation...
...safe and responsible experience. When the OIP considers a student’s application, it should take into account not only the specific region involved, but also the way the travel is structured—including the proposed itinerary and the organizations and institutions involved—and the applicant??s ability to navigate the society around them as measured by language skills, cultural and ethnic background, and even related experiences...
...feeling of discontentment, an applicant who agreed to speak to FM wrote in an e-mail that the security flaw in the application database allowed anyone to access the information simply by altering the URL to an available page or, in the applicant??s case, using a feature on the Firefox browser. According to the applicant, the desired information was accessed “with four mouse clicks...