B-schools Try to Root Out Ghostwritten Applications

B-schools Try to Root Out Ghostwritten Applications

To ensure prospective students are not writing their references, some business schools require contact details of referees who will talk to the school directly about the applicant.

Isser Gallogly, associate dean of MBA admissions and programme innovation at NYU Stern School of Business (US), says:

There are definitely ways in which we can see when something looks suspect. Every individual has their own writing style so if we spot similarities, that is cause for concern.

Most business schools do not like talking about the problem. But many are clamping down on ghostwritten applications in a variety of ways — and data suggest their efforts are paying off. About 40% of respondents to a 2014 survey of business school applicants by the Association of International Graduate Admissions Consultants (AIGAC), the professional body, said at least one manager asked them to draft their own recommendation letter. This year the same question found 29.2% had been asked.

Students ghostwrite their references not from a desire to cheat, but because of a lack of time, according to Nick Barniville, associate dean of graduate programmes at ESMT Berlin (Germany).

MBA applicants suffer from the same problems as everyone else looking for a reference from a busy employer. The referee will often ask the employee to draft a reference for edit and sign-off.

But such ghostwriting is obvious to anyone reading an application when the form, style, grammatical flow and paragraph structure are similar across two references, Barniville adds.

Check out: How to Write a Graduate School Application Essay

References are only half the problem. Schools are also unhappy about a more pernicious form of ghostwriting, in which applicants pay outside agencies to write their application essays — and many have been trying to stamp it out for years.

Typically business schools ask for a 500-word essay, sometimes several, to explain why an individual has chosen that school and what they hope to get out of their studies.

The AIGAC was formed in 2006 to deal with such ethical issues, Scott Shrum, secretary of the board, says.

Persuading someone else to write your application essays or your reference letter never pays, he claims.

If applicants are interviewed and their English is difficult [but their application] essays were perfect, the admissions team will see it immediately.

It is easy to find companies to ghostwrite MBA essays. A Google search throws up dozens of names, although all but one of these companies declined to comment on their practices. Leeds-based Essay Writer, which claims to be the UK’s largest online provider of custom dissertations, charges GBP 183 for a 1,000-word Master’s level essay with delivery promised in seven days.

Most clients are international candidates with limited skills in the application language, according to David Burton, the general manager. Others are mature applicants or students who have not written for a long time. He says:

Often they do not want us to write a whole piece but want help getting into a piece or feedback on how to enhance it.

Ghostwriting essays and references might be unethical, but if you are caught, your application would not necessarily be rejected, according to Barniville.

Check out: The Secret to Convincing MBA Recommendations

Most schools take a tougher line, insisting on an automatic rejection if ghostwriting is discovered, according to David Asch, quality services director for the accreditation body EFMD. He says:

Most university regulations say that the applications process must be honest, so if you mislead you can be sent away.

Technology has helped in the battle against ghostwriters. Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management (US) and SDA Bocconi School of Management (Italy) both insist on video essays in which applicants answer three questions about themselves within days of submitting their written application.

Many admissions committees use verification services, such as Re Vera, to conduct background checks to ensure that the applicants are representing themselves accurately.

Brilliantly written essays that do not match first-round standardised business school test scores, such as the GMAT verbal subscore, serve as a red flag to admissions committees, Susan Cera, a director of Stratus Admissions Counseling, says.

Admissions committees reach out to applicants with quick and easy questions via email and look at the writing in the email response to see if it matches what is in the essays.

Cera says that the only effective policy is zero tolerance.

Source: The Financial Times

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