The 15 Minute Launching Pad for College
The choice of where, how, when, and what to study can
be quite an ordeal for many students planning for college. For many students,
even after going through a progressive process over a two year period, the
college decision may become even muddier. Proper focus on your aptitude and
ability, and what makes for a sensible college and ultimate career choice is
vitally important, saves time, and may avoid poorly considered and
irrecoverable career decisions.
Only you can make that important decision regarding
where to attend college and what to study that can lead to a viable career. One
may encounter well meaning but misguided advice from friends, family,
counselors, reading sources and even the Internet. Sportademics.com has
summarized a multitude of resources to produce an efficient, realistic plan
that can be digested in 15 minutes to launch your college decision making.
Please follow the launching pad outline and hopefully in a busy world this will
assist decisively at a crucial time in your life cycle – the College Decision.
1. Assuming
the department of your projected major is reputable, seek to attend the best
school where you are accepted that you can afford (or otherwise attend with
financial assistance). The national average this year for college graduates
with bachelor’s degrees obtaining a job after graduation in their field was
63%. Georgetown’s rate was 96% by comparison.
2. Take
courses and preparatory tests for the ACT and SAT college admission tests.
Studies reveal statistically higher scores with preparation. These tests may
also get you over the hump for scholarship and admission.
3. Don’t get
hung up on dorms and living arrangements, senior classes, abroad study, church,
sports, or extracurricular activities. All these matters have been worked out
far in advance of your entrance. Many fellow students will have the same
religion, desire for sports, and study abroad, etc. It is school and your
college education that counts. All colleges have multiple options, but many
require your living in a dorm for at least the first year. Choose a roommate
you don’t know. Studies support a better college experience with an unknown
roommate. Use the roommate match process if provided. You’ve been with your
hometown buddies for years. They will still be your friends without necessarily
being your roommate.
4. Pursue
Advanced Placement (AP) transfer credits by taking tough classes in high school
and preparing for the AP tests. Get the very best grades in high school you can
taking the highest tier college requirements with your schedule containing
English, Math, World Language, Science, Social Science, and Arts. As a senior
you may spurt, develop confidence, and reach much higher than you previously
envisioned.
5. Initially
during the college decision process much will be thrown at you such as career
and job placements post college, graduate school admission placements, food
plans, computers, off campus housing, student unions, libraries, male to female
ratios, sports and Intramurals, fraternities, sororities,
bikes/scooters/transportation/parking/cars, etc. Bottom line is that much of
this is for orientation week–right now get into the best affordable school you
can that has a superb department in your chosen field of study. There is no
legitimate college that has not figured out all these ancillary student needs
and services. All colleges have libraries with quiet areas, varying cafeteria
plans, and hang out areas.
6. Finances:
apply for scholarships repeatedly, make phone calls (If I was on the bubble
with another student, a phone call may get you in and even get you scholarship
funding. Borrow as little money as needed. You will be responsible for the loan
and the government will find and fine you for nonpayment. It is good to work
part time depending on your schedule.
7. Community
colleges are fine choices as well, as some of the very best students come from
community colleges, saves tons of money, and may have easier access to part
time work. Transferring to a four year college after the community college
experience is highly legitimate.
8. Essay –
this is a biggie:
- Be personal and creative with depth; and write about something
you know with a purpose - I wrote about gunnel
jumping a canoe and it worked.
- Express your
attitudes, beliefs, feelings, personal qualities and imagination. Engage the
reader.
- Answer the essay
inquiry – specifically the college may give you a topic, or they may allow you
to write your own.
- Preparation of the
writing is vital – have a specific purpose, tone, and goal in mind. Little
facts are im portant and make
a difference.
- Organization is
key. Tell a story and read it to family, teachers, and friends.
- Write a
draft; let it sit for a couple days and then come back and see how it sounds.
Don’t be too rigid and make the minor
changes that need to be made.
- Do not confuse the
reader–and that is why others need to read the essay.
- Don’t speculate
about matters you think the admissions and scholarship committees might want to
read ( i.e., environment ); be specific, get to the point and no more without
exaggeration; be grammatically correct; write with insight and in short,
concise paragraphs.
9. We cannot
emphasize enough the importance of getting into the highest tier school you can
that is affordable. Our tips for financial aid include websites such as
fastweb.com, and the matched college itself. There are many college websites
and one can easily get lost and spend an inordinate amount of time trying to
obtain scholarship cash. Pick a simple plan for financial aid and stick to it.
10. Scholarships
require grammatically correct completed applications; otherwise they end up in
the waste
basket. Tips include:
11. Eligibility
– if you are not eligible, don’t bother,
12. Copies,
deadlines, and a secondary review are a must.
13. Call if
you need help or want to inform the decision makers that you are truly
interested.
14. College
social life is important; however, there are so many unpredictable variables
that you will find your way, peers, clique, and niche of friends in time. Even
the geeky roommate may be the very best thing for you while obtaining entrance
into the most popular fraternity may be your college demise.
15. If you
don’t have a major or are undecided, don’t sweat it – still go to the very best
college you can with broad depth and varied areas of study.
16. College is
about seeking a match, not a prize to be won. If you cannot live without big
time sports then don’t visit small colleges that don’t offer that scene.
17. Letters of
Recommendation: Go to an instructor that knows you and has a reputation for
writing good recommendations for students. These letters may tip you over the
hump for acceptance or a scholarship.
18. Selected
students may wish to explore ROTC and the national service academies for
lifestyle, maturity, financial aid, and career possibilities. These all come
with both a guaranteed job upon graduation but graduates also incur a
multi-year military service obligation.
19. Get street
smart regarding colleges – study the college rankings from the Princeton
Review, US News and World Report, Barron’s, Rugg’s Recommendatons, Fiske
Guide,and the College Board. Review the websites of the schools that interest
you. Go to college fairs and visit selected schools. Talk to the professors and
students: getting first hand knowledge regarding their experiences. Trust me –
students will spill the beans both ways. One can usually discern happiness from
facial expressions (with the exception of finals week). Is this an enjoyable
place to be for four years? Go on the tour as well as roam the college. Go into
classes of your projected major. Appreciate in advance that a college tour will
rarely say anything negative and is hyped to a degree.
20. Applications
with letters of reference, transcripts, and completeness must be double
checked.
21. If you are
applying to high tiered schools, you may need to submit more applications –
however you need only one acceptance if that is your goal. Your C plus average
will not get you into Stanford – don’t waste your time. However, with
motivation, a good essay, and references you may get into another very good
private or public school. Six is plenty of applications.
22. Don’t
forget to log your community service, extracurricular activities, hours, and
specific leadership qualities (president of forensic club, etc.) starting in
high school as a freshman.
23. Interviews:
prepare with mock interviews and answer with smiles and clear answers that
communicate who you are. Remember to maintain good eye contact, speak with
clarity and feeling.
24. If the
college campus is well maintained and groomed, you can reasonably assume its
financial health is good.
25. Be honest,
open minded, and don’t under estimate yourself in making the ultimate college
decision. Go for it.
26. Sports –
all types including NCAA, Club, Intramural, dorm, Greek, and personal gym are
all there on virtually every campus. Staying fit and being on a team correlates
highly with better grades, interpersonal relationships, and the ability to
overcome obstacles with self confidence.
27. Parents
cannot relive their lives through their children. Sorry, but the DNA and times
are different – so the motivations, desires, interests, and expectations of the
child will be different from those of the parent. Parents need to provide
advice when needed and allow the student’s maturity and leadership to develop
as he or she works through the college decision. It’s OK to go to Iowa. Go to
parents' weekend and get a good appreciation for your child’s college choice.
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