1 / 41

Senior Parent Night

Senior Parent Night. The Road To College. HHS Guidance Counselors Mrs. Tracy Encarnacao, District Director of Guidance. Mr. Bruce Powers A - Castillo Ms. Stacey O’Brien Castro – Des & Early College Seniors Mrs. Susan Beaudoin Dev – Her Ms. Samantha Massahos Hey – McC

Télécharger la présentation

Senior Parent Night

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. Senior Parent Night The Road To College

  2. HHS Guidance CounselorsMrs. Tracy Encarnacao, District Director of Guidance • Mr. Bruce Powers A - Castillo • Ms. Stacey O’Brien Castro – Des & Early College Seniors • Mrs. Susan Beaudoin Dev – Her • Ms. Samantha Massahos Hey – McC • Mrs. Jami Dion McG– Pare • Mrs. Mindy Cripps Park - Rom • Mr. Andy Alsup Ros – Z

  3. Agenda • Graduation Requirements • Timelines • Deadlines • The College Search Process • Applying • Standardized Testing • Naviance

  4. HHS Graduation Requirements

  5. Roadmap to College • Be proactive! • Do a little each day • Communicate early and often with your counselor and your teachers • Read the directions • Ask for help when needed

  6. September • Gather letters of recommendation • Finalize college selections and know the deadlines! • Meet with guidance counselor • Plan college visits • Make appointments with college representatives who are visiting HHS this fall. The list is available in Naviance. • Create Commonapp Account for appropriate schools • Complete FERPA form on Naviance • Check online for college applications

  7. October-November • Decide which schools you will apply to, and make a list of each college’s deadlines. • Take the SAT (October/November) or the ACT (October) • If applying for Early Action, finish taking standardized tests. • Ask teachers to complete the evaluation forms and school report forms • Brainstorm for and write your essay. Make sure to edit your essay • Arrange and attend college interviews and practice for them • Submit your transcript request to guidance 2 weeks in advance • If applying for Early Action, submit your application

  8. December-February • Send regular decision applications. Deadlines are around Jan 1 • Complete FAFSA form (after Jan. 1) • Apply to outside scholarships • Ask counselor to complete mid-year reports, typically due in Feb. • Keep those grades up!

  9. Spring Timeline • Receive notification letters • Discuss financial aid offers and contact schools if they are seriously insufficient • Notify schools of your admission decision and send in your deposit to your chosen college (May 1st) • Take part in college orientation and pre-freshman year activities

  10. Types of Deadlines • Early Action (Non-Binding) Typically Oct 15, Nov 1, Nov 15 • Early Decision(Binding) • Typically Oct 15, Nov 1, Nov 15 • Regular Decision • Varies….as early as Dec 1 and as late as April 1 • Rolling Admissions • Applications processed upon arrival. • Decisions received in 6-8 weeks • Open Enrollment • Admittance dependent on graduation from HHS

  11. What are the options for college?

  12. What are the options for college? How much training & education am I willing to get to achieve my career & life goals? 2-year Technical School or Community College 4-year University or College

  13. 2-Year Technical & Community Colleges • Affordable ($5,000-$6,000 per year) • Transfer Options/ MA Transfer Program 1 or 2 years at a community college can help you get into your dream school, while developing characteristics (such as independence, ambition, and maturity) necessary to become a successful college student. • Licensure/Certification • These schools offer hundreds of Associate Degree and Certificate Programs that lead to licensure in the career field of your choice

  14. 2-Year Admissions Requirements • High School Diploma • Completion of the Accu-placer exam • Exam administered by the college to evaluate Math and English proficiency • Scores determine class placement for the first semester of college.

  15. Community Colleges of MA • Provide well-rounded college experience • Campuses offer many of the same clubs and activities as 4-yr colleges • Many colleges have intercollegiate or club athletic teams • Smaller class sizes • MA Transfer

  16. 4-Year Colleges and Universities • There are over 2,000 4-year colleges and universities in the country. • Decide the factors that are important to you to help narrow down a list of schools that are a good match.

  17. Selectivity/Admission Requirements • Be realistic • Where do you stack up in comparison to admission requirements at a particular school? • What factors are important for admission? • What percentage of students are accepted each year? • Make sure your schools fall into one of three categories: • Reach • 50/50 • Probable

  18. Programs of Study • Not all schools have every academic major • Undecided? Be sure to look at schools that have all of your potential areas of interest!

  19. Location, Location, Location! • Far away or close to home? • Urban vs. suburban vs. rural • Be sure to factor in the cost of travel if you plan to go far away

  20. Size/Enrollment • Weigh the pros & cons of a small school vs. large university • Do you want to be a big fish in a small pond? • Do you want to blend in with the crowd in a lecture hall of 250+ students?

  21. Cost • The investment of a college education is expensive. • Be sure to include colleges that are “financially safe”, such as state schools or community college.

  22. What’s In an Application?

  23. Parts of the Application • Application • Essay • SAT/ACT scores • High school transcript • Letters of recommendation • Interview (depends on the school) • Application fee

  24. What are Colleges Looking For? • Classes taken & quality of courses • GPA • Involvement • Standardized test scores • Essay/Letters of recommendation

  25. College Applications • 2 main types of applications • Common Application • College-specific Application

  26. Common Application • www.commonapp.org • Accepted by over 500 colleges and universities • One general application & essay • Helps student organize all aspects of their applications • Many schools require a supplemental piece- know what your school’s requirements are! • Letters of recommendation and transcripts are sent by Guidance Counselors through Naviance

  27. College-Specific Applications • Can apply online or via paper application • Most colleges have copies of application available on their website

  28. Standardized Testing

  29. Standardized Tests • SAT Reasoning Test • SAT Subject Tests • ACT

  30. Upcoming SAT Dates • SAT is offered at Haverhill • Cost: • $52.50- SAT Reasoning • $26.00 + $16 for each test- SAT Subject Tests • Visit www.collegeboard.org for updated information!

  31. Upcoming ACT Dates • $54.50 with writing section • Visit www.actstudent.org for updated information!

  32. What is Naviance and how can it help me?

  33. Naviance • Manage and track all aspects of the admissions process. • Delivers all of the supporting documents for college applications • Provides valuable insight into the college admissions process with college search, scatter grams, scholarship information and college application statistics

  34. Take A Career Interest Survey

  35. Research Career Options

  36. Perform a College SearchChoose the criteria you are looking for in your ideal college

  37. Research Schools

  38. How do you Stack Up?

  39. Keep Track of Schools You Are Considering

  40. Track Submitted Applications

  41. Questions?

More Related