If you intresting in sport buy steroids you find place where you can find information about steroids

Helicopter Parents on the Rise at B-Schools

The parents of the millennial generation making their way through business school just can’t seem to stay away…from the admissions office. A new study from Veritas Prep, a Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT) test preparation company, shows the “helicopter parent” phenomenon — a term used to describe parents who tend to hover around their adult children — is still alive and well on business school campuses across the country.

I first wrote about the trend back in 2007, when admissions officers shared stories of parents who acted like their children were freshman entering college, rather than MBA students with several years of work experience on their resumes. Back then, school officials told me they had seen parents of millennials – students from the generation born in or after 1982 – do things like attend receptions for admitted students and help their child move into and decorate their new campus apartment.

Now, their involvement seems to have crept into the admissions realm, sometimes to their children’s detriment, according to a survey conducted this summer of admissions officers at 50 leading business schools. Of the 35 admissions officers that responded, 33 percent said that a pushy or overbearing parent has compromised an applicant’s chance of admission. A growing number of admissions officers also believe that parents are leaving a “noticeable footprint’ on applications submitted to their schools, the survey said.

Estimates vary among admissions officers on just how widespread the trend is. Fifty percent of the respondents said they felt parents were involved in the application process on less than 10 percent of applications they received. However, a smaller subset of the respondents said they believed parents played a “measurable role” in applications on as many as 40 percent of applications submitted to their school.

Read the full article: Helicopter Parents on the Rise at B-Schools

Related Articles

Previous post: UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School Women’s Workshop – Forte Sponsor Event

Next post: Admissions Director Q&A: Rodrigo Malta of the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin