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Student Services Orientation: Important Information and Support for High School Students

Get to know the key names and information you need for a successful high school experience, including promotion and graduation requirements, PSAT/PLAN results, and life after high school. Q&A session with counselors and other support staff.

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Student Services Orientation: Important Information and Support for High School Students

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  1. Student Services Orientation September 14, 2015

  2. Agenda Names you should know Promotion & graduation requirements PSAT/PLAN results Life after high school CFNC And More! Q & A

  3. Counselors: Mrs. Patty MillerDean of Students Ms. Toria Greene A-Da Mr. Chuck Small De-Ja Ms. Alicia Kirkpatrick Sch-Z Ms. Valorie HallenbeckJe-Moq Mr. Stefon Lowman Mor-Sc

  4. Ms. Ina Nyko,School Psychologist inyko Ms. Brandy Lyons, Student Assistance Program Counselor blyons Ms. Nancy McMillanSchool Nurse nmcmillan Mr. Brandon Clowers,School Social Worker bclowers Ms. Kelley Schroeder,Academic Coach kschroeder Ms. Debbie Fluke Guidance Tech dfluke Ms. Sarah Coombs, Intervention Coordinator scoombs Ms. Nancy Stewart,Registrar nstewart Ms. Sharon Manning, Career Development Coordinator smanning1 Ms. Ginny Honkomp Data Manager vhonkomp

  5. Patty Miller pmiller5 Dean Toria Greene tgreene A-Da Chuck Small csmall De-Ja Valorie Hallenbeck vhallenbeck Je-Moq Stefon Lowman slowman Mor-Sc Alicia Kirkpatrick akirkpatrick2 Sch-Z Use the correct email address for your counselor! name@wcpss.net

  6. The BEST way to see my counselor: Please email your counselor to make an appointment. Your counselor will email you your appointment time. If you have a test during the appointment time, please email your counselor back for a new time. Student should show the email to their teacher as their pass. OR You may come to Student Services and fill out a form to request an appointment with your counselor.

  7. Future Ready Core Course of Study • 4 English: English I, II, III, IV • 4 Math: Math I, Math II, Math III, and a math beyond Math III • 3 Science: Earth/Environmental Science, Biology, Physical Science • 4 Social Studies: World History, Civics & Economics, American History I, II or AP U.S. History/History of the Americas + Social Studies elective • 1 Healthful Living: Healthful Living • 6 Electives:REQUIRED: Any 2 from arts, second language or CTE. (TheUNC system requires at least 2 levels of the same world language for admission).RECOMMENDED: Any 4 that form an educational concentration - may be from any subject area including arts, CTE, or any subject area or combination. • 22 Total Credits (for those entering high school in 2012 & beyond)

  8. Grades/GPA Calculation – Only final grades have been used in GPA calculation. • Quality Points:Used to weight Honors/AP courses.Extra 1 point for Honors, Extra 2 points for AP/IB • Overall Cumulative GPA = # of earned quality points divided by the # of potential credits. • All grades will be reported numerically on the report card and transcript. The grade scale also has changed: 90-100 = A; 80-89 = B; 70-79 = C; 60-69 = D; less than 60 = F. • Transcript Requests – see Mrs. Stewart, Registrar Understanding your transcript

  9. Students must pass 75% of their courses to obtain and maintain a driver’s license. (5 out of 7 courses) Driver’s Eligibility OR

  10. In order to maintain athletic eligibility, a student is required to: • Pass 5 of 7 classes during the semester previous to the sport they wish to play, • Have a minimum 1.5 cumulative GPA (or 2.0 GPA in the previous semester), and • Attend school at least 85% of the school days in the previous semester.

  11. Understanding your PSAT & PLAN results PSAT Preliminary SAT – Oct. 14 PLAN Preliminary ACT – Oct. 30 My College Quick Start on College Board provides a personalized SAT study program based on your PSAT scores. The access code for this program is at the bottom of your PSAT score report. https://quickstart.collegeboard.org/posweb/login.jsp Scores should be back in December. Check the Student Services website and the links below for help.

  12. Coming in March 2016 • Your first chance to take the new SAT is March 5. • The SAT is changing in some ways, but these things are staying the same:  • It’s accepted by almost all U.S. colleges • It’s typically taken by juniors in the spring and seniors in the fall • SAT scores and high school GPA are a powerful combination. Used together, there’s nothing better at predicting potential college success • What has been changed? • All-new essay — and it’s optional • No penalty for guessing • No vocab that you’ll never use again • Facts about the New SAT: • 4 parts: Reading, Writing and Language, Math, and the optional SAT Essay • 400–1600 score scale • 3 hours and 50 minutes with the SAT Essay — or 3 hours without it • 4 answer choices (retrieved from https://collegereadiness.collegeboard.org/sat)

  13. SAT-I is the SAT. Plan to take it in the spring of your junior year! SAT-II is a shorter test for particular subject areas; some colleges may require these. Check your possible future college choices and plan to take them at or near the end of your junior year if at all possible. ACT is a standardized reasoning test that evaluates students in English, math, science & social studies. For some students, it is a good alternative to the SAT. And ACT scores will convert to SAT scores! Wake County plans to pay for you to take this next year! Remember, most colleges select your highest individual scores, even if they were scored on different test dates. Taking college entrance tests

  14. Opportunities to enrich your summer We hope you make summers count! Get a job!Travel! Volunteer! Attend educational programs! Plan for This Year: HOBY, Governor’s School, Summer Ventures in Science/Math, UNC Heels for Success, NCSSM, Catalyst Conference, etc. See Summer Opportunitieslisted on our school website! Also, check out CFNC’s College Preparedness Opportunities listings: Visit CFNC and look under the “Plan for College” tab

  15. Planning For Life After High School What should you do NOW? Research your options! For example: • Colleges - Consider majors offered, size, location, $$ (in-state vs. out-of-state, public vs. private), climate, and diverse culture of the campus. Remember that NC has 16 state-supported universities! • Military – How many branches are there? Which one(s) are you considering? ROTC scholarships? Military academy admission? • Job Market – What jobs can I consider straight out of high school? What jobs require additional education? Begin now!It is NOT too early!

  16. Planning for College NC’s 16 State-Supported Colleges/Universitieshttp://www.northcarolina.edu/ Completion of minimum admissions requirementsto apply: 2.5 GPA, SAT combined CR+M=800, and ACT Composite 17 NC’s 36 Independent Colleges/Universities: http://www.ncicu.org/ NC’s 58 Community Colleges: http://www.nccommunitycolleges.edu/

  17. Create Your CFNC Account Now! Visit College Foundation North Carolina (CFNC) & learn how to PLAN, APPLY, and PAY for college! PLAN for: high school, college, career APPLY for: college & financial aid PAY for: college, learn about grants & scholarships, financial literacy and more! http://www.cfnc.org

  18. Military/Recruiter Information • See our schedule of recruiters – located on Enloe website. Click on Student Tab. Click Career Services. • See Ms. Manning in Career Services(Room 1934)if you have any additional questions. • Visit websites:Air Force, www.airforce.com; Army, www.goarmy.com; Navy, www.navy.com; Marines, www.marines.com; and Coast Guard, www.gocoastguard.com.

  19. Part-Time and Full-Time Jobs • Stay up to date by going to our website: Enloe website, click Student tab, click Career Services, then Job Opportunities. • Youth Work Permit:www.nclabor.com Also, check out: • Job Link Career Center: http://www.nccommerce.com/workforce/job-seekers/ Click on Youth Ages 14-21 • Jobs now: http://www.jobsnow.nc.gov/

  20. Stay Connected to Us! @EnloeStdntSrvcs and @EnloeCareer https://www.facebook.com/EnloeSS Career Services Website: http://enloecareerservices.weebly.com Student Services Website: http://enloehsstudentservices.weebly.com/ Remind.com Text ‘7dbd2’ to 81010 or 919.729.5123 OR email: 7dbd2@mail.remind.com College representatives visit Enloe each week! Keep a calendar of important deadlines and events. Bookmark Student Services and check regularly!

  21. http://enloehs.wcpss.net/ – Enloe school website http://enloehsstudentservices.weebly.com/ – Student Services http://enloecareerservices.weebly.com – Career Services http://www.cfnc.org/ – College Foundation of NC http://www.collegeboard.org/ – College Board SAT http://www.act.org/– ACT http://www.nclabor.com/ – NC Department of Labor http://www.northcarolina.edu/–NC’s State Colleges http://www.ncicu.org/ – NC’s Independent Colleges Website References

  22. Student Services is here to help you, so please don’t be afraid to ask! Have a great sophomore year!

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