Admissions 2.0 is about social networking
AJAI SREEVATSAN
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Career counselling has taken on a new dimension, virtually. Applying for college admission or venturing abroad for studies, students look to online forums for immediate help.
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Today's bunch of
school and college
going youngsters
use Wikipedia as a
secondary teacher; Facebook
or Orkut instead of making
phone calls and would tweet
rather than writing long,
tortured emails. They work,
play and communicate in the
virtual world.
Many of these services use
the wisdom of the crowd.
Tapping into this information
pool, students are increasingly
using online
forums and groups on social
networking sites as career
counselling tools.
Making life-altering decisions
like which college to go
to or which course to take up
based on advice given by
`strangers' on online social
networking forums seems to
be only a quick sprint from
teen life 2.0.
Bringing together `strangers'
Sonal Matharu, who used
Orkut to reach other candidates
to ask if they would be
willing to swap streams with
her after the admission process,
says "I didn't know anyone
personally. I didn't have
any contact numbers. Social
networking is a great leveller.
Usually, people are very helpful.
They might also need
help sometime."
She says she now religiously
replies to any query that
juniors ask her because she
benefitted from such help
herself. It is not altruism; it is
just social networking etiquette.
Thousands of people
edit Wikipedia without being
paid a rupee. That is how the
Internet works.
In the virtual world, there
are forums for discussion on
the merits of two different
courses, and there are even
subject or university-specific
groups. You just have to type
in a question and Google will
throw up lots of forums.
"Within 3 hours after my
IIT-JEE (2007-08) results
were announced, communities
to discuss which branch
to choose were formed on Orkut,"
says Shrey Goyal, moderator
of the `Indian
Institutes of Technology'
group on Facebook.
"The date of joining was
still three months away and
there was active discussion
about a variety of issues from
placement prospects to requirements
for stream
change after the first year if
one does not like the course."
According to him, from an
outsider's perspective, there
is not much idea about course
structure or placements and
since person-to-person contact
with a senior at college is
pretty much impossible, online
space comes to the aid of
students.
Placements and scholarship
If bringing down traditional
barriers is of great help to
students applying to Indian
universities, it plays a significant
role in the case of those
who apply to universities that
are abroad.
- PHOTO: K. MURALI KUMAR
VIRTUAL HELP: Students are increasingly using online forums and groups on social networking sites as career counselling tools.
"On online forums, people
even talk about cultural differences
that pop up while
applying to a U.S. university,
like how not to be stupidly
modest in writing a scholarship
essay," says Rohini Mohan,
a student at Columbia
University.
"That especially helped me
get a full tuition scholarship,
which I don't think I would
have if I had followed the Indian
way of being humble."
She says that on networking
forums like `thegradcafe',
a dedicated graduate school
discussion forum without
any pictures or profiles, real
help is offered from what to
say in a visa interview to
where to find a cheap barber
near the university.
Pointing out that anything
which addresses the anxieties
of over-stressed students is
welcome, Prakash Gopalan,
Dean (Students Affairs), IITBombay,
says "There is nothing
better than college students
helping out their
juniors online instead of using
their Internet time for
gaming or blogging.
However, those seeking
advice must make sure that
they get their information
from multiple sources and
cross-confirm."
In effect, use online forums
as a sort of survey tool that
enables generalisation.
As Rohini put it, "No one
will tell you specifics - that
international students don't
get internship opportunities
until they arrive on campus.
Networks are a good way of
finding people, not
information."
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