cover image Dream School: Finding the College That’s Right for You

Dream School: Finding the College That’s Right for You

Jeffrey Selingo. Scribner, $30 (352p) ISBN 978-1-6680-5620-2

College applicants should stop obsessing over brand-name institutions and search for a school that can help them determine “who [they] want to become” and develop the “mindset, relationships, and skills” to get there, according to this insightful guide. Drawing from interviews with students, parents, admissions officers, and experts, education writer Selingo (Who Gets in and Why) debunks the myth that one’s undergrad institution determines professional success (the list of Fortune 500 CEOs has alums from plenty of lesser-known schools, as well as Ivies) or postgrad pay. Pushing back on the idea that college is just a stepping stone to a high-powered career, he also highlights the value of school in developing one’s identity in broader ways, including via extracurriculars like intramural sports teams. As acceptance rates dwindle at big-name schools, applicants should take care to apply to “Plan B” colleges that get ignored in favor of Ivies, suggests Selingo, who notes that more obscure colleges can boast smaller classes, more individualized attention from professors, or simply the chance for students to be “big fish in a small pond.” Selingo intersperses his actionable advice with anecdotes from college students and parents, and he effectively exposes how the American “ ‘elite college or bust’ mentality” damages students, the education system, and the professional world. The result is an essential complement to Frank Bruni’s Where You Go Is Not Who You’ll Be. (Sept.)