Thursday, November 30, 2006

November 30th has Arrived

Today is the final day for many of you to submit your applications for admission to various colleges and universities. In California, the University of California campuses and some of the California State University campuses stop accepting applications after today. A fair number of Cal. State University campuses will accept applications beyond November 3oth, check here for more information. Many of you have already submitted your application and are now playing the waiting game. What does one do in the interregnum between application submittal and notification of admission (or not)?

I suggest focusing on enjoying and continuing to succeed in your final year of high school. College is an entirely different experience than high school has been. Many, myself included, feel like college is much more rewarding. If you particularly enjoy high school however, then live it up. Academically, the most important thing you can do during this time is to continue to practice the study habits that have gotten you to a place where you can reasonably expect to get into a good college. Practice makes perfect, or so they say. In the case of studying, writing, and success, I think "they" are right.

I hope that this blog has given you some food for thought and I intend to continue writing about topics relevant to the college search, including making a decision about which college to attend, issues facing education that students need to be aware of, and many others. I hope you will continue to join me in this peregrination.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

How Many Colleges to Apply to

In recent years students have been applying to more colleges and universities than they have historically. This is often thought of as a sound strategy given how competitive admissions has become at certain colleges. However, this practice is compounding the competitiveness in college admissions.

If you apply to seven different schools, each of these schools will treat your application as a serious one. They have to spend time and effort reading and evaluating the application. We all know, however, that not all applications are serious applications. In other words, students apply to some schools as "safety" schools which, barring an unforeseen disaster, they have no intention of enrolling. The number of safety schools students are applying to has also been increasing. Many of these applications are in fact vacuous. They have no real intention behind them.

Practically, for schools you have no intention of enrolling at, your application is in fact contributing to the increased competitiveness. For every application that is genuine, there maybe as many as one application that is not genuine. But to admissions offices, it doesn't matter. Colleges only have so many offers of admission they can award based on the size of their freshman class. Thus, if you have two applications, and the admissions rate for a particular college is 50%, one of those two people won't be admitted. What happens if the person who is admitted is the person who has no intention of enrolling while the person who wanted to attend that college got a denial? The college just lost a potential member of their freshman class and someone's heart got broken.

When you play this scenario out on a large scale, you can begin to see how the rise in the number of applications submitted by single students is increasing competition. Imagine at the hypothetical college I mentioned above that instead of just two applications there were ten, and that only five of them were genuine. If the 50% acceptance rate holds, then five will be admitted and five denied. However, when more applications start pouring in, colleges have to adjust their acceptance rates to accommodate the increase. Instead of accepting 50%, the college could now accept 40%. In that case, four students will be admitted and six denied. This might be a great situation for the college's rankings in US News and World Report, but it is not a good one for serious applicants.

More to come...

Friday, November 17, 2006

College is Not a Panacea

I apologize for not posting in the past couple of weeks. Things have been quite busy at both work and home. Thanks for sticking with me!

You might be wondering what I am referring to in the title of this blog post. What I mean is that going to college is not going to solve all of your problems. You will still have your family, your friends, and most importantly, yourself to deal with. College may provide you some physical and mental space to reflect on the various things that cause you to groan, but it will not make them magically go away.

I have spoken to many students who just can't wait to go to college so they can get away from the circumstances of their lives. However, just as one moves from place A to place B for college, one's problems also move from place A to place B with you. You can never escape from the things that ail you without confronting them head on. It often seems like it would be easier to confront our problems if we weren't so enmeshed in them. But this is precisely why they are problems. They are a part of you, and are related to how you see the world and your relationship to it. You will still see the world the same way when you go to college.

Does your mom become less overbearing when you don't live in the same house? Perhaps in the sense that she isn't physically looking over your shoulder all the time, but not really in the sense that she calls your cell every 3 hours. You see, the problem - your mother's overbearing nature and your inability to deal with it - remain. As I said, the only hope going to college provides is that it can give you time to reflect and consider new ways to constructively deal with your problems. Making new friends might aid you in this process, but the hard work - change - is all up to you.

Welcome to adulthood!

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Application Time is Upon Us

We are right in the middle of the application crunch. Many people are aware of the looming deadlines and have either already submitted all their applications or are working on them presently, or perhaps are waiting until Thanksgiving to get started. If I had one suggestion it would be not to wait. This process is stressful enough as it is. Waiting till the last minute may be your modus operandi, but consider what you are doing.

Applying to college is probably one of the more important milestones in your life up until now. You are making a determination about where you will spend the next four years of your life. This isn't math homework, or even a history project. This is your future. As an example, let's think about the personal statement. Writing a personal statement that is not a laundry list of everything you have done, but instead a coherent essay that addresses your motivation, challenges faced, and evidence of sustained engagement in academic and non-academic activities takes a lot of time and thought. Astute application readers, and most of them are fairly good at what they do, can tell the pretenders from the contenders.

Likewise, given the often limited space you have on a college application to list activities you have been involved in is not something to be taken lightly. If you only have one line left to list an activity and yet have four more activities you would like to list, what do you do? Do you put Powder Puff, Math Club, Lion's Club, or Student Newspaper? To answer that, you need to carefully consider what else you have listed and which activity conveys the true spirit of who you are.

Too often students try to create a false image of who they are to the admissions committees instead of accurately portraying themselves. They believe that in order to get admitted, one needs to be involved in particular types of activities or organizations. There is nothing wrong with listing Powder Puff, provided that it is something you are passionate about and have participated in for years. As someone who has read applications, I want to know who you are, not who you think I want you to be.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Preview Days & Other Ways to Visit a College

Colleges and Universities are dying for you to visit them. I cannot tell you how many times both college administrators and students have told me about the impact visiting a college has on them. It turns all your internet research, US News Rankings, and friends' often uniformed opinions into reality. You can walk the grounds, see where students hang out, eat the food, and generally get the feel for a college. You wouldn't buy a car without test driving it, would you? Also, wouldn't you likely test drive more than one car before making your final decision? It has always perplexed me how many students do not visit the top colleges on their list.

As it turns out, colleges and universities make it as easy as possible to provide you opportunities to visit their campuses. Many colleges hold an Open House style event, sometimes called Preview Day, during the time they are initially accepting applications. These are events where you can hear some information about your major, get an introduction to the college or University, have lunch, and take a tour. These are often a bit more relaxed because you may or may not have applied to the college or university. After you have applied, and the colleges really want to make you think twice about attending their institution, they will host another, more formal day to woo you. And believe me, colleges and universities are dying to woo you. If you are admitted to a college, then they want you to attend. You are a precious commodity.

If you are unable to make one of the official college or university events, then you can always schedule a tour of the campus. If you choose to take this route, I suggest you schedule your tour at a time when there are students on campus (not Christmas break). To be safe, when you call the tour office, ask them if school will be in session (even summer school works) when you are thinking about visiting. Colleges without students are not real exciting and you won't get a true feel for the campus without other students around. To return to my car analogy, you wouldn't test drive a car that didn't have an engine, would you?