Your junior year will be ending in a few short weeks. Now is the time to do a “college admission self-assessment.”
A few key questions suffice:
1. What is your three-year grade point average?
2. What are your junior-year SAT I or ACT scores?
3. What are your senior-year courses?
4. What is your tentative list of colleges as I enter the summer?
5. Are my grades and scores consistent with the academic and admission requirements of the colleges on my tentative list?
You have very specific answers for the first three questions. The next two pose a greater challenge.
If your tentative list is short – perhaps very short – then now is the time to check with your guidance counselor for additional suggestions. Or perhaps it is time to think about consulting with a private college advisor. Or both!
June is the time to check out college web sites for visitation schedules and summer day programs for rising seniors and their families. June also is the time to plan day or longer trips with your family to visit as many of your tentative choices as possible. Most colleges now encourage students to register for their visits online.
While on the web site you also should be looking for an answer to the last question: is my academic record consistent with the profile of students my colleges usually accept? Look on the admission section of the colleges’ web sites and heed the requirements and the entering class profile (most colleges list both).
If you judge your qualifications to be “in the ballpark” with recently enrolled students, then plan your visits! If your qualifications do not appear to be reflective of your colleges’ expectations, your self-assessment should result in developing a different and more appropriate list.
Will Dunfey
University Advisors
Showing posts with label college applications. Show all posts
Showing posts with label college applications. Show all posts
Monday, May 11, 2009
Monday, March 9, 2009
College Admission Status Letters in the Mail
March is typically the month where many students will be notified of their admission status. For some, the letters bring and for others, disappointment. Some will be on wait lists. If students have done their college homework and applied to six to eight schools that are their "first choice" schools, they won't be in despair if they're only accepted to one school.
Students might be in a situation where they're accepted to more than one "first choice" school. Over the next six to seven weeks, you'll have the time to think through the pros and cons of what those particular institutions can offer you. Perhaps you'd like to revisit the campus? Or spend some time in a class, or in a residence hall. Choosing a college is an important decision, and students need to take the time and make an informed decision. A good fit over brand name is always a wiser choice.
No matter if you are accepted, wait listed, or denied, stay positive this spring. You will have a choice.
Liam Dunfey
University Advisors
Students might be in a situation where they're accepted to more than one "first choice" school. Over the next six to seven weeks, you'll have the time to think through the pros and cons of what those particular institutions can offer you. Perhaps you'd like to revisit the campus? Or spend some time in a class, or in a residence hall. Choosing a college is an important decision, and students need to take the time and make an informed decision. A good fit over brand name is always a wiser choice.
No matter if you are accepted, wait listed, or denied, stay positive this spring. You will have a choice.
Liam Dunfey
University Advisors
Monday, February 2, 2009
Hitting College Application Deadlines
It’s that time of year again when regular admission deadlines are looming. Students will sometimes wait till the last minute to upload their essays, or request transcripts, or ask teachers for letters of recommendation. There’s no point in procrastinating till the last day when you have months of planning time to make sure all necessary documents are received well before the deadline.
During these challenging economic times, there are some advantages to submitting your application before the deadline. The first is that many institutions are sending acceptance letters faster than in previous years because they want you to strongly consider them as an attractive option. Second, for students’ and parents’ sake, there is no need to compound the stress of waiting till the last minute when one missed item can cause a delay in an institution making a decision, or even worse, not considering the student at all because there are missing components to the application.
The college search can be stressful, but taking the anxiety out of it is very easy, especially at this time of the admission cycle. If students find themselves in the precarious position of missing a deadline, they should consider strongly calling the institution and asking what their options are. It never hurts to ask!
Liam Dunfey
University Advisors
During these challenging economic times, there are some advantages to submitting your application before the deadline. The first is that many institutions are sending acceptance letters faster than in previous years because they want you to strongly consider them as an attractive option. Second, for students’ and parents’ sake, there is no need to compound the stress of waiting till the last minute when one missed item can cause a delay in an institution making a decision, or even worse, not considering the student at all because there are missing components to the application.
The college search can be stressful, but taking the anxiety out of it is very easy, especially at this time of the admission cycle. If students find themselves in the precarious position of missing a deadline, they should consider strongly calling the institution and asking what their options are. It never hurts to ask!
Liam Dunfey
University Advisors
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