1 / 24

Junior Parent College Meeting USA/Canada: Testing, Counseling, Choosing

Junior Parent College Meeting USA/Canada: Testing, Counseling, Choosing. Agenda. Spring Semester. Testing. TEST Preparation. ASP Mean SAT Results. SAT Math: 636 SAT Critical Reading: 609 SAT Writing: 626. SAT & ACT Test Dates. SAT & SAT IIs 2012: January 28, May 5, June 2 ACT

matia
Download Presentation

Junior Parent College Meeting USA/Canada: Testing, Counseling, Choosing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Junior Parent College Meeting USA/Canada: Testing, Counseling, Choosing

  2. Agenda

  3. Spring Semester

  4. Testing

  5. TEST Preparation

  6. ASP Mean SAT Results • SAT Math: 636 • SAT Critical Reading: 609 • SAT Writing: 626

  7. SAT & ACT Test Dates SAT & SAT IIs • 2012: January 28, May 5, June 2 ACT • 2012: Feb 11 (w/o writing), April 14, June 9

  8. Getting Started: Counseling • Required Orientation Meetings (February) • First Individual Meeting with Counselor (assigned once group meeting is completed) • Review graduation requirements and academic record • Initial list of colleges • Parents encouraged to attend • Second Individual Meeting with Counselor • Data sheet submitted • Explore personal qualities, goals and interests • Revise initial list of colleges

  9. Getting Started: Parent Contribution • Parent Data Sheet: How I see …. • Download from the ASP website under College Guidance. Preferably completed by second student meeting

  10. College Planning and Prep • Visit University Website • Participate in meetings with visiting university representatives • Utilize college guidebooks • Plan college visits • Consider summer programs • Talk with alumni, friends, relatives, contacts

  11. Selecting a College • Genuine interest • College type (size, private, public, liberal arts, co-ed) • Location • Academic Environment (competitiveness, majors, core curriculum) • Campus Life (housing, social life, athletics) • Expenses/Costs • Entrance requirements: Safe/Target/Reach (8-10 schools)

  12. EARLY Admissions • Early Decision • Early Action • Rolling Admissions

  13. Evaluating the Applicant

  14. ACADEMIC • Quality of courses • Grades • Position on the class (Grade Distribution and Weighted GPA) • Standardized Test Scores • Recommendations • Awards

  15. EXTRA-CURRICULAR ENGAGEMENT • Seek evidence of meaningful involvement • Emphasis on depth, not breadth

  16. Uniqueness • Personal essay • Interview • Recommendations • Special Talents

  17. Alumni Connections • In most cases, parents or grandparents • Loyalty to institution

  18. Contribution to Diversity • Minority students • International students • Geographic distribution • Gender

  19. Character • Ethical and responsible citizens • Contributing members of society • Future leaders in a global society

  20. University Priorities • Enrollment plans • Development

  21. Selective College Admissions • These colleges deny between 70 and 90% of applicants, many more than admitted • Academic success is required but not sufficient for admission • Your chances are doubled if you have differentiation • Examples of differentiation include: minority status, alumni affiliation, athletic recruitment, award-winning achievements, outstanding leadership, exceptional talent and, to some extent, international exposure

  22. Admission to CANADA • Appeal of Canadian universities • Each school has specific admission requirements • Application deadline varies from January to March • IB Diploma candidates are not required to submit SAT scores • AP and USA high school diploma applicants must submit SAT, including SAT IIs, or ACT scores • Applications made to specific faculties

  23. Admissions to the UK • Applications submitted via UCAS to study a specific course within university • In most cases, IB Diploma or 4 AP exams required • Scottish unis will often admit with a high school diploma and SAT scores • Conditional offers will be based on predicted exam results

  24. Financial Aid • Net price calculator • Need-based • Loans • Scholarships & Grants • Work-study programs • Non-Need Based • US Citizens • FAFSA • Profile • College application • International Students • Collegeboard Financial Aid Supplement

More Related