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	<title>News &#187; prospective students</title>
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		<title>Bates names new vice president and dean of enrollment and external affairs</title>
		<link>http://www.bates.edu/news/2009/12/14/new-vp-cable/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bates.edu/news/2009/12/14/new-vp-cable/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Dec 2009 20:37:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bates News</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Admissions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Career Services]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Elaine Tuttle Hansen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Faculty and staff]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maine/world]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trustees]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[communications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joseph Willett]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nancy Cable]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[national reputation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[prospective students]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[student financial services]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://home.bates.edu/?p=16072</guid>
		<description><![CDATA["Nancy Cable brings us the expertise, national reputation and leadership skills needed to engage all Bates constituencies in advancing the mission of the College." -- Bates President Elaine Tuttle Hansen]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<a href="http://www.bates.edu/news/wp-content/gallery/source-december-2009/nancycableonline.jpg" title="Nancy J. Cable, vice president and dean of enrollment and external affairs

(Photograph by Mike Mariant, UVa/Semester at Sea)"  >
	<img class="ngg-singlepic ngg-right" src="http://www.bates.edu/news/wp-content/blogs.dir/174/files/cache/3166__240x_nancycableonline.jpg" alt="Nancy J. Cable" title="Nancy J. Cable" />
</a>

<p>Bates College has appointed Nancy J. Cable as vice president and dean of enrollment and external affairs, a newly created position overseeing Bates&#8217; offices of admissions, student financial services, communications and media relations, and career services.</p>
<p>&#8220;Nancy Cable brings us the expertise, national reputation and leadership skills needed to engage all Bates constituencies in advancing the mission of the College,&#8221; Bates President Elaine Tuttle Hansen said in making the announcement. &#8220;She is the leader Bates needs to present the vitality of the current academic and co-curricular program to a global audience of prospective students and faculty and extend the College&#8217;s reach and presence in the landscape of higher education.&#8221;</p>
<p>In accepting this position, Cable said that Bates &#8220;is uniquely well-positioned to meet its founder&#8217;s challenge: for Bates to be a &#8216;college for coming time.&#8217; This historic challenge calls forward college-wide communications, admissions, career services and financial-aid efforts to enroll the most talented and deserving prospective students through Bates&#8217; hallmark personalized approach to student recruitment. I am privileged to be joining Bates faculty, senior leadership, trustees and students in this important work for the College&#8217;s future.&#8221;</p>
<p>According to Bates Trustee Chair Joseph T. Willett, &#8220;This position was created to work with the senior leadership to enhance the college&#8217;s culture of inquiry, evidence, and transparency and help us tell the Bates story in a strategic way.  In Nancy Cable we have found a talented and seasoned administrator who will collaborate effectively with the College’s many constituencies.&#8221;</p>
<p>Cable served most recently in executive fundraising roles at the University of Virginia and with its academic partner, Semester at Sea. She has served as Virginia Engineering Foundation vice president for development and associate dean for development of the School of Engineering and Applied Science. In these roles, she secured funding for a nanotechnology science facility, numerous scholarships, the Desmond Tutu Program in Global Understanding and for the inauguration of a faculty lectureship and student scholarship program in China-U.S. relations for Semester at Sea.</p>
<p>Between 1992 and 2005, Cable served Davidson College as vice president and dean of admission and financial aid. She led a college-wide effort to advance selectivity, diversity and faculty involvement in the admission and financial aid process, and provided a tangible link between student recruitment and fundraising through the inauguration of several national scholarship programs.</p>
<p>Cable previously served as a vice president at Guilford College and held several administrative and faculty positions at Denison University.</p>
<p>A native of Ohio, Cable holds a bachelor&#8217;s degree with Phi Beta Kappa honors from Marietta College, a master&#8217;s in education from the University of Vermont and a doctorate in educational history from the University of Virginia.</p>
<p>Known for her efforts to strengthen socioeconomic diversity within the fields of admissions and financial aid, Cable has served on a variety of national boards and committees related to higher education, including the College Board, the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education Task Force on Admissions, the College Board Committee on Selective Admission Criteria and the National Merit Scholarship Selection Committee. She has been a board member of Marietta College and the Cannon and Asheville schools in North Carolina. She has served as a guest speaker and lecturer at colleges and secondary schools nationally.</p>
<p>Cable will begin her service at Bates Feb. 22.</p>
<p>On Jan. 1, 2010, Bates&#8217; current Vice President for External Affairs William C. Hiss, Bates class of 1966, assumes the position of executive director of international advancement and lecturer in Asian studies. Hiss will work with the Office of College Advancement to strengthen the interaction between Bates and the worldwide community and to promote Bates&#8217; reputation internationally as a leading liberal arts college. His efforts will support deeper connections with Bates alumni, parents and friends outside the United States, with an immediate focus on Asia.  An expert on the history of Bates, Hiss will also continue to develop multimedia presentations about the College&#8217;s past for audiences on and off campus and to work with the Garcelon Society, which raises scholarship funds for Androscoggin County students at Bates.</p>
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		<title>Why Bates?</title>
		<link>http://www.bates.edu/news/2005/06/07/why-bates/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bates.edu/news/2005/06/07/why-bates/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jun 2005 17:32:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bates News</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Admissions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alumni and friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bates Magazine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Faculty and staff]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parents and families]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bates Admissions staff]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bates applications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Class of 2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[prospective students]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://home.bates.edu/?p=17121</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Valentine’s Day, as the Bates Admissions staff is halfway through reading, re-reading, and re-re-reading every one of a record 4,506 applications for the Class of 2009, the topic of conversation in Lindholm House is the courtship between applicant and college. For starters, the College expects a certain love light in the eyes of each student who applies. “We want people who want to be here, who have a passion for Bates,” says Jared Cash ’04, assistant dean of admissions.]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>A simple question, says Dean of Admissions Wylie Mitchell, but it&#8217;s key to how he and his staff review 4,500-plus applicants each year</h3>
<p><em>By H. jay Burns</em></p>
<div>
<p>On Valentine’s Day, as the Bates Admissions staff is halfway through reading, re-reading, and re-re-reading every one of a record 4,506 applications for the Class of 2009, the topic of conversation in Lindholm House is the courtship between applicant and college.</p>
<p>For starters, the College expects a certain love light in the eyes of each student who applies. “We want people who want to be here, who have a passion for Bates,” says Jared Cash ’04, assistant dean of admissions.</p>

<a href="http://www.bates.edu/news/wp-content/gallery/source-november-2007/wylie4521-web.jpg" title="Dean of Admissions Wylie Mitchell says that &quot;we try to give the advantage to the applicant and put as many people as possible into our competition.&quot;"  >
	<img class="ngg-singlepic ngg-right" src="http://www.bates.edu/news/wp-content/blogs.dir/174/files/cache/3437__300x_wylie4521-web.jpg" alt="Dean of Admissions Wylie Mitchell " title="Dean of Admissions Wylie Mitchell " />
</a>

<p><strong><span id="more-17121"></span></strong></p>
<p>“All things being equal, we want someone for whom Bates is at the top of their list,” adds Dean of Admissions Wylie Mitchell, who has been at Bates since 1978, four years before Cash was born, and has served as dean since 1995.</p>
<p>Bates wants to be wooed, but the College is also a demanding suitor. The incoming class must number about 500 students evenly split between men and women, who represent worldwide human diversity, and also display the talent and proclivity to sustain 31 varsity sports, 89 clubs and activities (including art, dance, debate, theater, and music programs), and 32 academic programs.</p>
<p>So while mutual attraction is the ultimate goal, the process is also a “competition,” Mitchell says, and for every acceptance letter mailed, the College sends three letters of rejection. This is what makes the admissions courtship an angst-filled affair for applicants and parents: the 3-to-1 odds against acceptance, never mind the stories in the media that depict the process as something more perilous than Shackleton’s South Pole adventures.</p>
<p>Consider the numbers:</p>
<p><strong>4,506</strong>: the grand total of Bates applications, counting Early Decision (472) and Regular Decision (4,034);<br />
<strong>216</strong>: students accepted from Early Decision (they must matriculate);<br />
<strong>1,035</strong>: students accepted from Regular Decision, of whom about 300 will choose to attend Bates (students typically are accepted by several colleges);<br />
<strong>500</strong>: the target for the incoming class.</p>
<p>As with any courtship, the final result, however magical, defies easy explanation. Associate Professor of Biology Joe Pelliccia is serving as a faculty fellow in admissions in 2004-05. In late winter, he gathered with eight other admissions deans around a well-worn wooden table (a relic from Coram or Hedge, says Mitchell) for the discussion, debate, and decision on every applicant, whose credentials are reviewed three different times in the weeks leading up to committee meetings.</p>
<p>“What was heartening was to see that, when all the data was in front of you” — the application, essays, grades, SATs if provided, recommendations, interview reports — “most decisions were pretty straightforward,” Pelliccia says. “For those cases that were on the fence, I was impressed that everyone’s voice mattered.” President Hansen, who sat in on one morning session, also noted the “painstaking” care given each application.</p>
<p>Pelliccia captures the complexity — data and voices — and the Bates process, beginning with the interview, pays more attention to the voices. For instance, Bates is the rare college whose deans interview students both on campus and off, the latter during the fall season when they fan out across the country (visiting two dozen states during the campaign) and the world. Alumni-in-Admissions volunteers help out, too, and they conducted 541 interviews off campus this past cycle.</p>
<p>While many selective colleges conduct interviews (policies vary greatly), few value the one-on-one discussion as much as Bates. “At a college that supports the individual through all four years,” Mitchell says, “it seems straightforward that when you enroll 500 new students you would want to meet as many of those people as possible, going as far as three or four continents to do so.”</p>
<p>The primacy of the interview is reflected by a telling sentence that’s been in the Bates admissions Viewbook, unchanged, since the 1980s: “Candidates without an interview may be placing themselves at a disadvantage in the evaluation process.”</p>
<p>Says Mitchell, “It’s the most significant instruction that Bates gives prospective students.” The numbers bear him out. Only 13 percent of applicants who do not interview are admitted. Applicants who do interview are admitted at a 44 percent clip.</p>
<p>Besides being a vehicle for Bates to get to know an applicant (more later), the interview is a tool to keep the student front and center in the process. “When I meet prospective students here in the lounge at Lindholm House,” notes Mitchell, “it tends to be a conversation with the parent, with the student observing. In the interview, the student gets into the conversation.”</p>
<p>To give students more opportunities to be part of the conversation, Mitchell instituted a novel practice: split campus tours, where parents are led by one guide and students by another. Success begets success, and during the split tours prospective students can interact with charismatic Bates student tour guides. (The split-tour practice was quickly chronicled with approval by Jay Matthews in The Washington Post.)</p>
<p>These tricks of the trade have a greater purpose — “the dignity of each individual,” in the words of the Bates mission statement, the very basic College ethos that also led Bates to abolish SAT requirements in 1984, believing, and ultimately proving, the test to be a questionable predictor of academic success. This ethos is also reflected, less famously but just as importantly, in a modest plaque in Lindholm House honoring namesake Milt Lindholm ’35, dean emeritus of admissions. “You looked beyond the credentials and saw the person,” the plaque says.</p>
<p>In late winter the deans peel back the layers of credentials during committee deliberations. Optimism rules. “Bates admissions has always had a policy of hopefulness,” says Ginny Harrison ’63, longtime associate dean of admissions who retired in 2004. “It’s the same upbeat attitude about people that the College as a whole has.” As Mitchell likes to say, “We are not an office of rejection but an office of admission.” It sounds like a catch-phrase — after all, Bates mailed more than 3,000 letters of rejection this year — but Mitchell points out that “Bates ‘reads to admit,’ meaning we try to give the advantage to the applicant and put as many people as possible into our competition.”</p>
<p>For example, the subtle arrangement of paper in a Bates applicant’s manila admissions folder — the paper trail reflecting the applicant’s journey through high school to the cusp of college — suggests how Bates admissions reads to admit. Some schools put SATs and other test scores first. “Some offices are driven by their average SAT profile,” says Mitchell. “As an applicant, I would be afraid that if a folder starts with test scores, that would determine how thoroughly the folder is read.”</p>
<p>In a Bates admissions folder, in contrast, the reader sees applicant-created materials first: the application and Bates supplement, the essay, and other personal materials. “We read these materials first and ask, ‘Who is this person? What do they do? What do they offer? How do they think?’” Mitchell says.</p>
<p>Many schools require applicants to fill out a supplement to the Common Application, often asking for additional writing samples. Here, Bates poses a deceptively simple question: “Why, in particular, do you wish to attend Bates?” The query is another way, along with the interview and a campus visit, for Bates to know whether a student is truly interested or merely playing the field. Because half of all applicants apply to five or more colleges, and 10 percent apply to 11 or more schools, colleges like Bates increasingly measure applicant interest. In fact, every official contact a student has with Bates is chronicled in the admissions folder.</p>
<p>The middle third of the folder includes test scores — if submitted — as well as grades and recommendations. High grades in tough courses are expected; students who submit SATs need to know that Bates’ median is 1350 (out of 1600, though the new writing component will make the top score 2400). The student’s intellectual promise is assessed. “You never know 100 percent what’s being said in a recommendation,” Mitchell explains. “But a string of phrases like ‘hard worker&#8230; nice&#8230; consistent&#8230; always does well,’ may not suggest an applicant who delves beyond what’s at hand.”</p>
<p>The final item in the folder is the interview report, an all-important bookend.</p>
<p>Yet for all its importance, the purpose of the interview is sometimes misunderstood. When Mitchell educates new staffers, senior admissions fellows, and Alumni-in-Admissions volunteers, he tells them “not to think of the prospective student as a potential friend, a roommate, or a teammate. Admissions professionals are interested in the breadth of interests that students have. We are not simply drawn to people we like. We listen, but don’t judge.”</p>
<p>Harrison suggests that the applicant just try to “be yourself” in the interview. “Get beyond the pat answer. Don’t try to say what you think we want to hear.”</p>
<p>“For the successful candidate, the interview report should confirm all the other evidence in the folder,” Mitchell says. “That evidence needs to tell us that the applicant represents the best of Bates: talent, independence, motivation, and a desire to make connections with the world.”</p>
<p>Like a pitcher who goes to his best pitch in a tight spot, the committee relies on the basics — applicant interest and compatibility — when decisions are close. The valedictorian from a tiny Maine high school who gets a good interview report and whose sibling is an alum is admitted. (At Bates, as at other selective schools, applicants’ family relationships to Bates are considered — especially in the case of “legacies,” children of alums. Typically, 20 to 25 legacy students enroll each year from an applicant pool of about 50.) Yet, the applicant who wants Arabic and business courses and expresses worries about the senior thesis in the interview goes on the waitlist.</p>
<p>Still, there’s no glee, à la <em>American Idol</em>, when a folder goes into the deny box. “Who doesn’t get admitted to Bates?” repeats Cash, a Maine native. He shrugs. “A lot of great kids.”</div>
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