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Which SUNY are You?

Which SUNY are You?. SUNY: More opportunities for you to pursue your goals than any other state university system in the nation. Do not confuse cost with worth All public colleges are not the same All public institutions are not large

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Which SUNY are You?

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  1. Which SUNY are You?

  2. SUNY: More opportunities for you to pursue your goals than any other state university system in the nation.

  3. Do not confuse cost with worth All public colleges are not the same All public institutions are not large Many public universities are selective in admission, including SUNY Merit scholarships, honors programs, small classes…are available at SUNY A Few Considerations

  4. Choice 64 individual campuses Urban, rural, large and small Distance learning Study abroad Over 5,000 undergraduate programs Why SUNY?

  5. Opportunity Undergraduate research Outstanding faculty Diversity Access Why SUNY?

  6. Success Over 2.8 million alumni Virtually any career imaginable can be found at SUNY Internship and career search/exploration opportunities Graduate schools and pre-professional programs Notable alumni Why SUNY?

  7. Why SUNY? Value Among America’s Best College Buys Tuition and fees remain low and very competitive nationally

  8. SUNY Campus Types • University Centers and Doctoral Degree Granting Institutions • University Colleges • Technology Colleges • Community Colleges

  9. University Centers and Doctoral Degree Granting Institutions • 1,000 to over 19,000 undergraduates • Research institutions • Degree programs through doctorate, professional schools • Undergraduate honors programs • University Centers:NCAA Division I athletics

  10. U Buffalo • Albany • Binghamton • Stony Brook University Centers

  11. Upstate Medical • Environmental Science & Forestry • Cornell • College of Ceramics at Alfred U Colleges with Special Missions • Optometry • Downstate Medical

  12. University Colleges • 3,500 to over 9,000 undergraduates • Small cities and towns • Bachelor’s & Master’s • Primarily liberal arts and sciences with pre-professional • Undergraduate honors programs • NCAA Division III athletics

  13. Plattsburgh • Potsdam • Oswego • Brockport • Empire State • Buffalo State • Geneseo • Cortland • Fredonia • Oneonta • New Paltz • Purchase University Colleges • Old Westbury

  14. Technology Colleges • 1,600 to over 6,000 undergraduates • Hands-on education in cutting-edge technologies along with traditional disciplines • Certificate, AOS, AAS, AA/AS, BS, BT, Master’s at Maritime and SUNYIT • NCAA Division III—Cobleskill, Farmingdale, Maritime, Morrisville, SUNYIT • NJCAA Division III – Alfred State, Delhi • USCAA -- Canton

  15. Canton • SUNYIT • Morrisville • Cobleskill • Delhi • Alfred State • Maritime Technology Colleges • Farmingdale

  16. Community Colleges • 30 campuses • 1,700 to over 15,000 full-time students • Certificates degrees = immediate employment • Associate degrees = transfer preparation • Full- or part-time study, day or evening study • Commute or reside on-campus • Affordable exploration • Open enrollment? Not always

  17. Community Colleges

  18. SUNY General Education Requirements • Common, system-wide learning goals • No less than 30 credits in seven of eight knowledge and skill areas and two competencies • Prepare students for the job market • Are helpful in defining interests and competencies for undecided students

  19. SUNY Application Process • 52 of 64 campuses use one web-based application • Application fee = $50 per campus choice • All applications processed by Application Services Center (ASC) in Albany • SUNY Online Academic Record (SOAR) • Supporting documentation sent to campuses • Check with individual campuses for specifics (deadlines, and special entry options) • Decisions made by campuses

  20. Traditional Admission Review High school record: • Number of academic units • Level of coursework • Rank in class • Regents exam scores • Overall GPA • SAT or ACT results

  21. Typical 2011-12 Expenses State-Operated Campuses Baccalaureate Degree Programs New York State Residents Living on Campus Community College Tuition = $3,700 (e)

  22. Scholarship Examples (all renewable) • UAlbany: Presidential Scholars receive up to $3,400/year • Canton: “Fund for Excellence” scholarship, $500 up to $5,000 • Oswego: Approximately 1/3 entering freshmen average = $2,300/year

  23. Financial Assistance • Approximately 75% of enrolled SUNY students receive assistance • Need-based assistance • Scholarships • Most SUNY campuses offer merit scholarships • Range of $100 up to full tuition + R & B • Program offerings vary by campus

  24. Recruitment Response Center800.342.3811askSUNY@suny.edu • Websitewww.suny.edu/student • SUNY Viewbook • SUNY Campuses Resources

  25. Please complete the survey you will soon receive in your inbox.Thank you for attending!

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