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“College is a match to be made, not a prize to be won. If you make a good match, isn’t that the best prize?”. ~Frank Sachs~ Director of College Counseling at The Blake School (MN) 2005 NACAC President. March 14, 2012. It Takes a Village. Guidance Counselors – write your SSR recommendation
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“College is a match to be made, not a prize to be won.If you make a good match, isn’t that the best prize?” ~Frank Sachs~Director of College Counseling at The Blake School (MN) 2005 NACAC President March 14, 2012
It Takes a Village • Guidance Counselors – write your SSR recommendation • College Counselors-meet with you and offer college advice • Teachers - write recommendations • College Reps- personal resource for individual colleges • Parents– too many roles to list • Siblings and Friends - can be helpful • Parent Coordinator – liaison to parents • YOU - make final choices
The College Office Staff • Ms. Cleary - College Counselor Homerooms A - H • Ms. Pedrick - College Counselor Homerooms I - Q • Ms. Ferrer - College Counselor Homerooms R - Z Secretaries • Ms. DiPaola – Transcripts for scholarships and summer programs • Ms. Demasi – SAT and ACT Fee Waivers for eligible students
SSR Background Questionnaire and College Advisement Worksheet MUST be entered online • Log in to your Student Tools account from the Stuy home page • Go to Onward to College and click on Enter the Data in your SSR Background Questionnaire as well as Enter Info in Your College Advisement Worksheet **The SSR Background Questionnaire and the College Advisement Worksheet should be completed as soon as possible
What are these very selective schools looking for – the “holistic” approach • Transcripts, • both grades and rigor of curriculum • talent/creativity/leadership • Research, sponsored or individual • essays/very specific essays related to that particular college • U Chicago, Columbia, Dartmouth (peer) • outside of the classroom experiences/activities • Interview • “demonstrating interest” such as: - registering on college’s website as a prospective student - joining mailing list - meeting college admissions reps here at Stuy in the Fall - attending colleges’ information sessions held in NYC. . .
intellectual passion enriching life experiences you high test scores sustained commitment to activities well-written essays talent curiosity service creativity interesting viewpoints academic success demonstrated interest aspirations quality of coursework leadershiplife goals Our application review is holistic.
What are you looking for in a college? • which academic subjects interest you the most? does the college offer this area of study? • large class size or small class size? lecture vs. classroom discussion? • Undergraduate Enrollment: approximately 2000 students (Liberal Arts and Sciences College), 5000 to 10,000 students (Private University), 20,000 students or more (Public University) • location: city, a town close to a city, a rural setting, distance from home? • What is the general student climate like on campus • Princeton Review gives lists: • Students Study The Most • Class Discussions encouraged/rare • Most Happy Students / Least Happy Students • Most Liberal Students / Most Conservative Students • Most publically active • Great College Town / College Town Not So Great • Everyone Plays Intramural Sports / No One Plays • Best College Theater • THE POINT: Find schools that are a good match for YOU
Keep in mind… there is not one school out there that is your PERFECT match… …you could be happy/fulfilled/challenged at a number of different colleges.
Time Management • Junior Year Homework: spend ½ hour, maybe 1 hour, per week researching colleges – a small time commitment that will affect 4 years of your life. • Summer Homework: spend 1 – 2 hours per week researching colleges – a small time commitment that will affect 4 years of your life. Don’t put it off!
The “Ivy League” – what is it? • Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, U. of Pennsylvania, Princeton, Yale • These are 8 great schools, but there are DOZENS and DOZENS of schools that are equally fantastic – seek out/research these very selective Universities and “Liberal Arts” and Sciences schools • Mark Bittman ‘67…Clark University (Worcester, MA) • Author of “How to Cook Everything”, NY Times contributor • Stanley Greenberg ‘73…Stony Brook • Landscape photographer who has shown at every major U.S. museum • Lucy Liu‘86…University of Michigan • Star of television, movie, and Broadway • Bram Cohen ‘93…SUNY Buffalo • Created BitTorrent (file sharing), named one of TIME magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2005
APRIL 26th • Make sure to visit a variety of colleges during our College Night. Ask Admissions Representatives - What are the advantages of attending: • a smaller Liberal Arts and Sciences college • a private university • a large public state university
Resources (Where do I start?): • See the college counselors this term. We have a busy, intense schedule in the fall term of your senior year. • Review your transcript, then review the statistics on Stuy tools • Stuyvesant College Handbook (see Lists of Colleges – Selectivity) • Visit colleges, if possible • Review college websites for dates, register for tours/info sessions • Make the most of April break and days we have off in May and June • College guides – Fiske and Princeton Review are very reliable • Check “Overlaps” lists • Check out College Board’s “College Matchmaker” and Princeton Review’s “Counselor-O-Matic” • College’s websites • Look for videos, photos, virtual tours
What are my chances of Admission? • The College Office suggests that students develop a list of approximately 10 colleges (excluding SUNY’s, CUNY’s, out of state public colleges, and international colleges) • A mixture of: • “Reach” (10% acceptance rate or less), • “Possible” (30% acceptance rate or less) , • “Target” (50% - 70% acceptance rate or less) , • “Safety” (90% acceptance rate), and • “Financial Safety” schools • College Handbook: see the sections called “Ranking the Selectivity of Colleges” and “What Colleges Look for in Applicants” • Admissions Statistics in your Stuy Student Tools account
Should I apply ED (Early Decision)? • ED: In many cases, applying Early Decision can increase a student’s chance of admission – check stats • Keep in mind pros and cons of ED: • making commitment to one college if accepted and offered financial aid that “makes attendance possible” • not able to compare financial aid packages • won’t know with certainty what financial aid package will be (although approximate idea can be determined)
Paying for College • Do not let the cost of a college prevent you from applying – FINANCIAL AID is usually based on the family’s ability to pay • Financial Safety schools (our New York Publics) • SUNY – numerous colleges in the SUNY system, many have Honors Programs • CUNY Macaulay Honors College (7 CUNY colleges participate) and General CUNY system • Other colleges less expensive than typical Private Colleges – Canadian schools, out-of-state publics, “Best Buy” colleges . . . • Discuss with your family and review individual colleges’ Financial Aid websites/policies: • how much financial aid can we expect to receive from a particular college (amount varies from college to college) [check cost calculators] • what can our family afford to pay each year?
Scholarships • Page 47 of the Stuy College Handbook lists helpful scholarship websites • Check the College Office Bulletin for monthly updates on additional scholarship opportunities
Accept Responsibility and Have Some Fun! ~~Things to Do List~~ • VISIT COLLEGES (Have fun ) • Complete SSR Background and College Advise forms found in your Student Tools Account • Organize college materials • Attend Stuy college fair APRIL 26 • Take SAT I Reasoning Test, SAT II Subject Tests, and/or ACT Plus Writing Test by June 2012 • By May 2012, request college recommendation letters from 2 teachers in different subject areas • Refer to your College Handbook