Posts Tagged ‘College Admissions’

Wait Listed? Getting Creative Might Be the Answer

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On April 15, 2010 the New York Times printed an Op-Ed entitled “The Wait List is the Hardest Part.”  The editorial was written by Saffa Khan, a senior in high school who was waitlisted at four colleges.

The content of the article was of course valuable, and 17-year-old Saffa gets points for making a Tom Petty reference.  But I’m not concerned with her content.  The thing that caught my attention is simply that a high school senior got published in the New York Times!  Saffa took huge initiative, worked hard to write a piece that would be of value, and put it out there to the world.

If you were a college admissions committee, do you think you might take notice?wait list

This student stands out amongst all the others who just sit there, waiting, hoping, wondering.  She even stands out amongst the students who send additional essays, or letters about why X school is their first choice, or new letters of recommendation.  All those things might help you to get off the waitlist, but getting published in the New York Times takes the cake.

Do you have something you can achieve that is truly out of the ordinary?  Can you get published in a national newspaper?  Win a poetry, science or chess contest or competition?  Self-publish a book?  Solve a problem that hasn’t been solved?

If you’re serious about getting off the waitlist, my advice is to follow Saffa’s example – and stop waiting.

Is Your Son or Daughter an Upcoming High School Senior? Start Your College Visits Now!

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Summer’s coming and your high school junior might be thinking more about trips to the beach than about college plans, but this is the perfect time to start planning college visits!  The earlier the better.  If you haven’t already, sit down with your son or daughter and think about what colleges he or she might want to attend.  Then plan a trip.

Harvard Gate

Top 4 reasons to visit colleges this summer:

  1. The college visit is the best way for you and your son or daughter to get a feeling for what a school is really like, beyond the two dimensionality of a web page or brochure.  Meet students, see dorm rooms and dining halls, and maybe even sit in on a class (though classes are not as numerous in the summer as they would be in the spring or fall).  Your child will get a sense of whether he or she wants to spend four years in this place.
  2. At schools that offer on-campus interviews, this is your child’s chance to meet an admissions representative before even submitting an application.  It is a chance to make an impression early on so the committee has a face – or at the very least an interview report — to attach to the application.  Alumni interviews don’t happen until after the application is submitted, so the on-campus interview is an opportunity not to be missed.
  3. Visiting shows the school that your child is serious about that school.  Who takes their summer vacation to go and visit colleges?  Not too many people.  Show up at colleges when you could be out on Cape Cod, and you make an impression.  Want to make the biggest splash?  Visit in June or July.  Most families wait until August, when your son or daughter will be just one face in a sea of hundreds.
  4. Summer visits give you time to revisit.  If you and your child like what you see and want to know more, or if you’re not sure and need a second look, making the first visit in June gives you plenty of time for a second round.  If you visit for the first time in February, your family will have to make decisions based on one visit alone.

So…  before hitting the beach, sit down for a college conversation, pull out a map, and start planning!

Do you Want to Go to College This Fall? There’s Still Room!

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The National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) just reported that colleges and universities still have space available for qualified freshman and/or transfer students.  Even better news it that nearly all have financial aid to offer.  The survey asked four-year colleges and universities about the availability of space, institutional financial aid and housing as of May 1, 2010. Twenty-three percent of the respondents are public colleges and 77% are private. Ninety-three percent have housing space.

If you have not yet completed the college admission process, and want to apply, see NACAC’s annual Space Availability Survey: Openings for Qualified Students.

Help! What Should I Write About in My College Application Essay?!

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IT’S NEVER TOO EARLY TO ASK YOURSELF THE QUESTION

If you’re finishing up your Junior year of high school, now is the time to start thinking about your college essays.  If you’re going to be a Junior and you’re reading this, it’s not too early.  The point is, start thinking of topics now!

Why now?  Because the best college essays go through many lives before you submit them.  You will write, re-write, and re-write again.  Weeks might go by after a first draft, during which inspiration can hit by surprise.

You want to have lots of time for your college admissions essays to percolate, to have those magic light bulb moments, or maybe even to wake up in the middle of the night from a dream and write a brilliantly creative essay (this really does happen!).

If you start thinking about your essays in November, you won’t have time for the process to work on you.  Instead of waking up with inspiration, you will wake up panicked or worried that you’re on the wrong track.  You don’t want that.

POSSIBLE ESSAY BRAINSTORMING QUESTIONS

Here are some things to think about while you’re thinking – it’s not a complete list by any means.  Be creative!

-          What’s my favorite school subject and why?

-          What’s my favorite extracurricular activity and why?

-          What character in a book inspires me and why?

-          What’s a story of how I went from a simplistic understanding of how the world works to a more complex, nuanced understanding?

-          What’s an object that’s important to me and why?

-          What’s a place/location that’s important to me and why?

-          Who are the most important people in my life and what have I learned from them?

Notice that many of these questions ask “and why?”  It is important to think deeply about the meaning of things in your life.  Determine what about your experience is unique to you.  That’s what will make your story about your grandmother, trip to Israel or soccer practice different from the next essay in the pile.

SIT DOWN (OR STAND UP) AND WRITE

Don’t just think about these questions – start writing!  Designate a journal for your college essay ideas.  You will be surprised how quickly it fills up with great content.  Keep filling it up, and when you go back to what you wrote several months before, you might be happily surprised by some of your thoughts.

If you’re struggling finding the right application essay topic, don’t despair.  There are professionals at The Essay Expert who will help you recognize what is special about your experiences and support you to present those experiences in words.  By working with an expert, you will end up with truly great college essays — and have the best chance of getting into the college of your dreams.

Why Go to a Top Private College? Get a Higher GPA – from the NYT Blog

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The New York Times reported last week that students going to private colleges have GPAs on average 0.3 points higher than those of their public college counterparts. With these higher GPAs, private college graduates are more likely to get in to top graduate, medical, law and business schools throughout the country. These statistics might be a wake up call for some students planning to attend public universities. Choosing a private university might cost more in the short term, but perhaps in the long term it’s worth the extra cost.

For help getting into the country’s top private schools, contact The Essay Expert.

For the New York Times blog article, see Want a Higher GPA?  Go to a Private College.

Waitlisted? U.S. News & World Report offers advice on what to do

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If you’ve been waitlisted at a college, graduate school or law school, there are steps you can take to increase your chances of getting a spot in the class. This article is about college, but the advice applies everywhere. You’ve Been Put on a Wait List for College. Now What? from US News & World Report.

Colleges Don’t Like Senior Slump in High School – from ABC News

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So you’ve gotten into college and now it’s time to relax? Not so fast says ABC News. Colleges Don’t Like Senior Slump in High School

BYU is Most Popular National University – from US News & World Report

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Move over, Harvard!  Brigham Young University had the highest rate of accepted offers in the country this year.  This trend is a sign that it’s not just the US News & World Report ranking that makes a school attractive to applicants.

You’ve Submitted Your College Application. Now What? – US News and World Report

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The Essay Expert is now working with college applicants on their admissions essays, and this article comes at exactly the right time. The advice here applies to job seekers too. It is always a good idea to follow up after you send an application for anything, as long as you don’t overdo it! You’ve Submitted Your Application. Now What? from US News and World Report.


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