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BOOK REVIEWS: Sentences and Sensibilities
By Diane Ravitch
Jane Austen in Scarsdale: Or Love, Death, and the SATs by PAULA MARANTZ COHEN
Jane Austen in Scarsdale: Or Love, Death, and
the SATs
By Paula Marantz Cohen
St. Martin’s Press, 2006, $23.95; 288
pages.
As reviewed by Diane Ravitch
What would Jane Austen write if she were
chronicling life in an affluent suburb of New York City? How would
she probe the social dilemmas of modern life among striving
families? This is a problem neatly solved in Paula Marantz
Cohen’s new novel, Jane
Austen in Scarsdale: Or Love, Death,
and the SATs, which is loosely based on Austen’s novel Persuasion.
(Cohen’s novel Jane
Austen in Boca, a modern-day Pride and Prejudice in a Florida retirement community, is outrageously funny.)
How better to investigate and satirize contemporary mores than
through the eyes of a high-school guidance counselor who is
juggling the demands of status-hungry parents and their anxious
children?
In the Austen novel, the central character is
Anne Elliot, the daughter of Sir Walter Elliot, a widower who has
spent his family into near poverty; Anne is a spinster who years
earlier had been persuaded by her snobbish family to abandon her
true love because he was not up to their elevated social standards.
In the Cohen novel, the central character is Anne Ehrlich, whose
own family and personal history reflect the story of Jane
Austen’s Anne Elliot.
The big difference between the two novels, of
course, is that Anne Ehrlich has a day job, which puts her in
charge of college admissions at Fenimore High School. This is the
process that stands at the very nexus of parental strivings and
ambitions. To her office troop hordes of angry parents, insisting
that she raise their child’s grade-point average
by a fraction of a point or that she classify their daughter as
learning disabled so she can have extra time on the SATs or that she
push their son to apply to the father’s alma mater even though
the boy lacks the grades to get in.
The Secret: Push and Package
Anyone who has any awareness of the pressure
on high-school students to get into Ivy League colleges will enjoy
this novel. I laughed out loud frequently as I read her fictional
description of life in the guidance office at Fenimore High. Cohen
has hit a bull’s-eye in describing the lengths to which
parents (and sometimes students) will go to gain entry to the best
colleges, where applicants often have only a 10 percent chance of
being admitted as freshmen.
Parents at Fenimore listen raptly as Curtis
Fink of Fink and Fink Educational Consultants advises them on how
to get their son or daughter into a top school. The secret, he
says, is “push and package.” Push them to study and do
their work, but that’s not enough. The real trick is
packaging. Like the boy who was a couch potato who got into
Haverford; the consultant said, I “gave him a political spin
and turned him into the Westchester Gandhi.” It is not good
enough, he warns parents, for your child to be a music genius. If
he makes all-state orchestra, that’s still not good enough.
He has to “cluster his assets” by joining a regional
wind ensemble or a rock band that opens for Bruce Springsteen or
tutoring underprivileged children in music or writing a music
column for Slate. What about the child who has never won an honor or
an award, asks a parent? Easy, says the consultant: get on the
Internet and find contests in small literary magazines that
no one reads. “Dig up the kid’s old papers and submit them.
If nothing else, you’ll get a certificate of recognition that you
can put down on the application. Admissions officers don’t read
these things too closely. If you’re lucky, they’ll think
the kid won.”
Anne Ehrlich has to contend with ambitious
parents who want their children to get into top colleges regardless
of the students own ability or interest. She keeps rocking chairs
in her office, hoping that they will calm emotional supplicants.
Some wealthy professionals try to bully her into writing letters
that will help their children’s chances at colleges they are
unlikely to be admitted to. Others threaten litigation. This is a
constant fear, since the previous head guidance counselor lost his
job after he miscalculated a student’s grade-point average
and the parents sued and extracted a six-figure settlement from the
school district.
The school principal is a decent man, but he
too feels the pressure from parents and knows that his tenure
depends on their good will. He is not above asking Anne to write a
recommendation to Georgetown for a student whose parents are
important in the local community, even though a more highly
qualified student also wants to go to Georgetown but has “no
parental muscle behind her.” Both the guidance counselor and
the principal know that Georgetown “has a habit of taking
only one a year from Fenimore,” and Anne absolutely refuses
to undercut the deserving student.
As the book unfolds, we learn about
“helicopter moms,” who “hovered above [their]
progeny ready to make a rapid, vertical landing at the slightest
provocation,” and “ripple kids,” the ones whom third-tier colleges eagerly seek out because their
“coolness” and their aura as trendsetters will attract
other students. The guidance counselor’s office is stuffed with
identical gorgeous brochures, all pitching “a unique educational
experience.” The community is brimming with franchise offices of
Princeton Review, Stanley Kaplan, SAT tutors, and other purveyors of
special courses to prepare students to beat the SATs. Students learn
principles, strategies, and commandments. “The key to SAT taking
is to skim,” says one successful tutor, who has a line of
Mercedes-Benzes and Lexuses outside his door. “If you start to
concentrate on what the questions really mean, you’ll realize how
stupid they are and never get anywhere.”
When Anne is not dealing with parents who want
their child labeled as ADD (attention deficit disorder) to get
extra privileges or with a student who is thinking of transferring
to a nearby high school to improve her class ranking, she is coping
with the shock of once again meeting her lost love, who has
enrolled his nephew in Fenimore High School. As in a Jane Austen
novel, all things work out for the best for the deserving, and Anne
Ehrlich eventually gets the man she had lost 13 years earlier. And
we, gentle readers, get many opportunities not only to enjoy a good
story, but to laugh at the absurdities of the college admissions
process and to ponder the wreckage of academic values.
Diane Ravitch is Research Professor of
Education at New York University and a member of the Koret Task
Force at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
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