Showing posts with label College road trips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College road trips. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

The Choice: Checklist for Juniors

http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/calendar-april-junior/#more-43629

Counselor’s Calendar | April Checklist for Juniors

Counselor’s Calendar: April
Timely advice from experts for students who want to stay on track during the college admissions process.

In March, The Choice introduced Counselor’s Calendar, an occasional series intended to keep students on track throughout the college admissions process.
Our latest installment focuses on college-bound juniors, who are beginning to think seriously about how to make the most of their soon-to-come senior year. (In case you missed it, we posted an April checklist for seniors on Monday.)
We’ve asked Erin K. Johnston, the co-director of college guidance at National Cathedral School in Washington, D.C., for some timely advice on what juniors should be doing in April to prepare for college. —Tanya Caldwell


Juniors, here is your college admissions checklist for April:

Continue your college research.
Take note of school presentations in your area — some colleges even travel together, so you could learn about a few colleges in one evening. Even better, try to attend a college fair as a way to gather information about dozens of colleges at once.
Some colleges offer spring open houses for juniors, or special summer opportunities for prospective applicants. Spring is a busy time for many juniors, with year-end school and extracurricular commitments, exams and final papers, and standardized tests. It’s not great timing that this is when colleges are available to visit your hometown or invite you to theirs, so be sure to prioritize. Protect your G.P.A. and transcript — don’t spend more time researching colleges than doing your schoolwork.

Keep financial considerations in mind.
As was noted on the March checklist, any student whose family cannot comfortably foot the cost of a college education should investigate options for need- and merit-based aid. Net-price calculators are user-friendly with completed tax returns in hand.

Have a plan for taking standardized tests.
Most students should sit for the ACT or SAT at least once before the end of the year, and those interested in selective universities should take at least two SAT Subject Tests, as well. Register for the tests well in advance to make sure you get a testing location near where you live.
If you’ve already taken the SAT or ACT once, seriously consider waiting until the fall for a retake rather than rushing to retake it again this spring. For many students, the older they are, the better they fare on any test.
Think about the coming Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate exams. How prepared are you to do well on those exams? Sometimes, students sit for more exams than they really need to take — it’s better to do well on three exams than to do poorly on five.
Finally, if you feel as if your standardized test results won’t accurately showcase your abilities (in other words, if you’re not a great test-taker) then add some test-optional or test-flexible colleges to your list of schools.

Think about potential recommendation writers.
Many colleges ask applicants to submit three letters of recommendation — one from a guidance counselor and two from teachers. Students generally ask teachers from junior year (and sometimes, from senior year) to provide a written endorsement, so now is an excellent time to consider whom you might ask for a letter of recommendation. Not sure whom to ask? Ask yourself: “Who sees the best version of me, as a student, in the classroom every day?” or “Who has seen me grow and change, in a good way, this year?” or “In which class do I act the way a successful college student acts?”

Check out the April PDF of the Common Application.
The Common Application, a universal method of applying to colleges accepted at more than 450 institutions, has promised to release a preview PDF of the 2012-13 form in mid-April. Students cannot begin to complete the online version until August 1.

Pick the right classes for senior year.
Think carefully about a schedule that will provide you with an appropriate challenge. Having reached senior year, there might be very few classes you actually need to take to graduate. Given this flexibility, balance choosing specialized electives with foundational courses. In other words, that science elective in zoology might be a lot of fun, but if you haven’t taken any physics in secondary school, now is a good time to do so.
Many colleges prefer to see that students have taken the basics in high school, so that they can explore specialized fields in depth at the collegiate level. Maximize your choices to demonstrate your interest in a particular field. When in doubt, consider calling a few admissions offices to get their take.

Watch the seniors.
Your friends in the Class of 2012 have received most of their college news by this point. Consider the ways they experienced this process, and take note of actions, words and approaches you’d like to emulate — as well as mistakes, blunders and missteps you’d like to avoid.
Now is the time of year when admissions statistics are released by schools and many news stories are written about general admission trends. Think about how all of this data might have an impact on your search. Compare, for example, a college’s acceptance rate for early decision candidates with its acceptance rate for regular decision candidates. Pay attention to the types of notifications that aren’t just “admit” or “deny,” such as decisions of wait list, guaranteed transfer, spring admission or fall 2013 (a “forced” gap year) admission.
At school, resist the urge to offer judgment or unsolicited advice (“Can you believe HE got in and SHE did not?” or “Why would you just X College over Y College?”). There are a lot of factors that go into an
admissions decision — both the decisions made by colleges, as well as the ones made by seniors — so watch, listen and observe. This will be you in just one short year.

Monday, March 26, 2012

College Visit Advice

College visits don’t have to be cookie-cutter

By , Washington Post Published: March 23 | Updated: Saturday, March 24, 1:15 PM

It was a gorgeous spring day at American University, the quad dotted with students playing Frisbee and studying on blankets, when I tagged along on a campus admissions tour led by an energetic student guide who peppered her listeners with school stats and personal stories.

As we passed three students camped out with their laptops, the guide called out to them: “Do you love AU?”  “Yes!” they all shouted in response, laughing. The guide turned back to us: “See, they love AU!”
A couple of parents laughed out loud, and a dad standing near me rolled his eyes dramatically at the exchange. But most of the prospective students barely reacted. They just stayed in the polite trance they’d maintained throughout the tour, the result, I had no doubt, of visiting too many campuses in too short a time.



It’s that time of year again, when thousands of parents pack their high-schoolers onto a plane or into the SUV and set off on road trips across the nation to a half-dozen colleges or more, hoping to find that one special school that’s the right fit for their student.
These visits are often the deciding factor for many juniors figuring out where to apply and for seniors picking where to enroll. And colleges know this. The admissions tours they offer are nothing more than a sales pitch — their last chance to nab you with a dazzling display of their offerings.

So universities go to great lengths (and lots of expense) to ensure that their campuses, their dorms and their students stand out from all the rest. Often that means locating the admissions center next to the most convenient parking, providing free coffee and casting the friendliest students as tour guides. Even the music you hear in admissions offices as you wait for your tour has probably been carefully selected — maybe even by students — to set the tone for your visit.

But as a higher education reporter for The Washington Post who has taken lots of campus tours with kids trying to make that big decision, I’ve learned that most of this is just window dressing. The only way to get a true feel for the culture of a university and its students is to simply hang out. My best advice? If you’re heading out on a college visit, give yourself enough time to pretend to be a college kid for a day: Lounge in a coffee shop near campus, read the student newspaper, attend a women’s softball game or an a capella concert, go jogging across the campus, have dinner at a bar with sticky floors, or simply ride the campus bus for a different kind of tour.

Friday, October 21, 2011

There's an App for that!

Thanks to a new Class of 2013 "An Admiral's Perspective" follower comes a recommendation for what sounds like a handy app for your next college road trip:

Fiske Interactive College Guide 2012

By Sourcebooks, Inc
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fiske-interactive-college/id418350915?mt=8

Of course, College Counseling and the Severn library have hardcopies of this book for your reference.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Question of the Week

"Can I miss school to visit a college?"

Severn recognizes that seniors and juniors may need to visit college campuses during the school year.  When planning for these anticipated absences, please complete the following procedures at least three days before your absence.

Directions:
1.  Complete College Visit Permission slip. Have your parents read and sign it.
2.  Inform your teachers of your anticipated absence.
3.  Get all assignments so that you can return to school prepared for your classes.
4.  Avoid, if you can, missing days of tests or when papers/projects are due.
5.  Return the form, initialed by each of your teachers, to the College Counseling Office.

**Consider writing a review of your visit to be posted on our blog to help create a library of college reviews.


Thursday, April 7, 2011

College Road Trip Map



Sample map detail

A great tool for your next college road trip! 1200 top colleges in the US and Canada, located relative to cities and interstate highways, identified as public or private, single-sex, and religiously affiliated, with a handy index by name on the bottom.
There is also a grid of basic contact and comparative information on the back (including web addresses on this edition!).
Available online for $9.95 from Hedberg Maps: http://hedbergmaps.com/store/catalog/10013 
and at some Barnes & Noble locations

Of course, there are also interesting maps on Family Connection including the "Top 20 most popular colleges where our students applied". (See college maps under the "College" tab on Family Connection).

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Welcome to our new blog! COLLEGE ROAD TRIP REVIEWS

In an effort to share your experiences with other students, we invite you to submit your own college visit reports.  Let us know what colleges you have recently visited. Describe the campus, the dorms,  information session, tour, specific department you may have visited. What were your impressions? How was the trip there? Did you fly, drive? How long did it take to get there? Was there something that really stood out--positive or negative.

We hope this blog will be a helpful tool as you continue to search for the college that is right for you.

Send your visit reports through e-mail to Mrs. Rudder. Keep them to about 3 paragraphs. Two or three photograph attachments are welcome.

--College Counseling