Should colleges use AI in admissions?

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In 2013, the computer science department at the University of Texas at Austin started using a homemade machine learning algorithm to help faculty make graduate admissions decisions. Seven years later the system was abandoned, attracting criticism that it shouldn’t have been used. 

The algorithm was based on previous admissions decisions and saved faculty members’ time. It used things like attendance at an “elite” university or letters of recommendation with the word “best” in them as predictive of admission

The university said the system never made admissions decisions on its own, as at least one faculty member would look over the recommendations. But detractors said that it encoded and legitimized any bias present in admissions decisions. 

Today, artificial intelligence is in the limelight. ChatGPT, an AI chatbot that generates human-like dialogue, has created significant buzz and renewed a conversation about what parts of human life and labor might be easily automated. 

Despite the criticism lobbied at systems like the one used previously by UT Austin, some universities and admissions officers are still clamoring to use AI to streamline the acceptance process. And companies are eager to help them.

“It’s picked up drastically,” said Abhinand Chincholi, CEO of OneOrigin, an artificial intelligence company. “The announcement of GPT — ChatGPT’s kind of technology — now has made everyone wanting AI.” 

But the colleges interested in AI don’t always have an idea of what they want to use it for, he said. 

Chincholi’s company offers a product called Sia, which provides speedy college transcript processing by extracting information like courses and credits. Once trained, it can determine what courses an incoming or transfer student may be eligible for, pushing the data to an institution’s information system. That can save time for admissions officers, and potentially cut university personnel costs, the company said.

Chincholi said the company is working with 35 university clients this year and is in the implementation process with eight others. It’s fielding about 60 information requests monthly from other colleges. Despite the ongoing questions some have about new uses of AI, Chincholi believes Sia’s work is firmly on the right side of ethical concerns. 

“Sia gives clues on whether to proceed with the applicant or not,” he said. “We would never allow an AI to make such decisions because it is very dangerous. You are now playing with the careers of students, the lives of students.”

Other AI companies go a little further in what they’re willing to offer. 

Student Select is a company that offers algorithms to predict admissions decisions for universities. 

Will Rose, chief technology officer at Student Select, said the company typically begins by looking at a university’s admissions rubric and its historical admissions data. Its technology then sorts applicants into three tiers based on their likelihood of admission. 

Applicants in the top tier can be approved by admissions officers more quickly, he said, and they get acceptance decisions sooner. Students in other tiers are still reviewed by college staff. 

Student Select also offers colleges what Rose described as insights about applicants. The technology analyzes essays and even recorded interviews to find evidence of critical thinking skills or specific personality traits. 

For example, an applicant who uses the word “flexibility” in response to a specific interview question may be expressing an “openness to experience,” one of the personality traits that Student Select measures. 

“Our company started back over a decade ago as a digital job interviewing platform so we really understand how to analyze job interviews and understand traits from these job interviews,” Rose said. “And over the years we’ve learned we can make the same kind of analysis in the higher ed realm.”

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