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Get important information and timelines for college planning in the spring and summer of 2019. Includes SAT/ACT test dates, college visits, teacher recommendations, and more.
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Class of 2020College Planning Meeting February 2019 Tenafly High School Guidance Department
Spring 2019 Timeline • Set up a college conference with your school counselor. Parents are encouraged to attend, but it is not required. • Create an SAT/ACT/Subject Test Timeline Register online at www.collegeboard.com or www.act.org SAT: May 4 and June 1 ACT: April 13, June 8 and July 13 • Begin to visit colleges and take advantage of our College Visit Policy! • 6 total college visit days. With no more than 3 in any given semester. • Pick up blue form in attendance 1 week prior to visit
Spring 2019 Timeline-Continued • Think about two teachers you will ask for letters of recommendation (junior year teachers are preferred). • Ask the teachers in person before the end of the school year. • Follow-up with them in the Fall and formally request the recommendation in Naviance. (You will be shown in fall). • Complete Junior Questionnaire and Parent Questionnaire on Naviance before the start of senior year. • Your counselor’s letter of recommendation will not be written until this is completed. • Must be logged in as student to access junior questionnaire.
Summer 2019 Timeline • Summer 2019 - You can start filling out the Common Application. www.commonapp.org. Over 750 colleges use this application. • Write a rough draft of your college essay • Continue to visit college campuses.
How to Research Colleges • Your Counselor- Junior Conference • Naviance Family Connection • College Websites • College Visits • College Fairs- Mini-Fairs on Tuesday’s at THS in Fall • Guidebooks • Parents, relatives, teachers, friends
College Search Factors • Competitiveness/Academics (Reach, Match, Safety) • Cost (Financial Aid/Scholarships) • Type-Private or Public • Size • Location- Urban, suburban, rural, distance from home • SAT/ACT Optional Schools • Programs- Major • Special Features – Your individual desires such as: study abroad programs, internships, co-op programs, housing options, sports • Personality – What is the Culture of the school? Conservative? Alternative? Frats and sororities? Emphasis on athletics?
Creating a Balanced List • Do your research to find out if the school is a good fit for you. Don’t get hung up on only colleges with names you know. • Create a balanced and realistic list of schools • 1-2 reach schools • 3-4 target schools • 1-2 safety schools • Don’t apply to schools that you have no intention of attending. • Spend time on the application. The quality of the essays and short answers matter! Do not have someone else write the essays! • Visit, Visit, Visit • If you can’t, then do your research online through virtual tours, photo galleries etc.
What Do Colleges Look For? • Academic Profile/Rigor of High School Transcript • Academic performance -Did you challenge yourself? • Senior year is important. Mid-Year reports are sent. • Grades/GPA from 9th grade-present • College Testing – SAT’s, Subject Tests, ACT’s, TOEFL • Check each college’s website for required testing • Extracurricular Activities – In or out of school • Recommendations (2 from teachers, 1 from your school counselor) • Interview (if offered) • Application and Essay • The Authentic “YOU”
What Admissions Wants to see in Letters of Recommendations As per NACAC and ACCIS Journal of College of Admissions, Summer 2018
Social Media & the College Application Process • Check your privacy settings on your social media accounts.You should nothave open/public accounts. • Be careful of what you post and what you share-colleges may see them. (Profile photos, cover photos etc.). • Get a new professional email address if yours is inappropriate/juvenile. • You should follow/like colleges that you are interested in applying to. It is great way to get to know them better and keep up with what is happening on campus.
College Vocabulary • Early Decision/Early Decision II (Binding) • Commonly referred to as “ED” • Can only do one • Not offered at every school • Early Action (Non-binding) • Early notification (mid-December)Restricted Early Action/ Single-Choice Early Action • Definition varies from school to school. (ie:At Yale, you may not simultaneously apply for Early Action or Early Decision to any other school with a few exceptions such as public universities • Regular- Typically January 1st or 15th • Rolling-Decisions are made shortly after your application is complete. • Priority- Preference given for scholarships and special programs. You can be deferred from early action or early decision in the fall. Your application will be then be considered in the pool of Regular decision applicants. You may be waitlisted and may only be admitted if a seat becomes available.
Naviance • Naviance is going to play a crucial role in the college search and application process. • Electronic submissions of transcripts, letters of recommendation etc. • All students/parents have their own accounts. An email was sent out with your registration code. • If you have questions about your account, please see/email your counselor • Important: Update your email address in Naviance. Personal email addresses are allowed.
Naviance Features • Statistics from Tenafly High School only • Scattergrams/Graphs • Application History • Resume Builder • College Search Engine