1 / 20

In Search of the Holy Grail – A Workshop on Selective College Admission

In Search of the Holy Grail – A Workshop on Selective College Admission. A few important notes : Our priority in the college counseling program at Minnetonka High School – helping the student to find the right fit! College is a match to be made, not a prize to be won!

jalene
Télécharger la présentation

In Search of the Holy Grail – A Workshop on Selective College Admission

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. In Search of the Holy Grail –A Workshop onSelective College Admission

  2. A few important notes : • Our priority in the college counseling program at Minnetonka High School – helping the student to find the right fit! • College is a match to be made, not a prize to be won! • Every student is encouraged to follow this rule: “You apply for admission to a college because you want to go there!”

  3. Categories of selectivity • Most selective (Harvard, Stanford) • Highly selective (Duke, Carleton) • Moderately selective (Boston University, Skidmore) • Selective (Hamline, Drake)

  4. Most selective • Harvard University – freshman class of 1,646 Applicants 22,796 Admitted 2,096 (9%) SAT Verbal 690-790 SAT Math 700-800 Top 10% 95%

  5. Stanford University – freshman class of 1,657 Applicants 22,333 Admitted 2,465 (11%) SAT Verbal 670-770 SAT Math 680-780 Top 10% 91%

  6. Highly Selective • Duke University – freshman class of 1,578 Applicants 19,386 Admitted 4,101 (23%) SAT Verbal 680-770 SAT Math 690-780 Top 10% 89%

  7. Carleton College – freshman class of 503 Applicants 4,457 Admitted 1,408 (32%) SAT Verbal 650-760 SAT Math 660-740 Top 10% 78%

  8. Moderately Selective • Boston University – freshman class of 4,200 Applicants 31,827 Admitted 17,900 (58%) SAT Verbal 570-690 SAT Math 590-690 Top 10% 53%

  9. Skidmore College – freshman class of 695 Applicants 6,055 Admitted 2,622 (44%) SAT Verbal 580-670 SAT Math 570-660 Top 10% 49%

  10. Selective • Hamline University – freshman class of 461 Applicants 1810 Admitted 1457 (78%) SAT Verbal 560-660 SAT Math 530-630 Top 10% 31%

  11. Drake University – freshman class of 782 Applicants 3,480 Admitted 2,906 (84%) SAT Verbal 520-640 SAT Math 510-650 Top 10% 29%

  12. A few national statistics (reality check!) • Enrollment in US colleges and universities Public 4-year institutions 6,837,600 Public 2-year institutions 6,184,229 Private 4-year institutions 4,161,815 Private 2-year institutions 303,825

  13. Enrollment at Minnesota colleges and universities Public 4-year institutions 130,529 Public 2-year institutions 110,324 Private 4-year institutions 115,510 Private 2-year institutions 5,338

  14. Other key data items: • 6-year graduation rate (in USA) at 4-year institutions 56% • 6-year graduation rate in Minnesota 58% • Percent of students who attend college in their home state 88% • Percent of students who applied to three or fewer colleges/universities 58% • Percent of students who are attending their first or second choice college 90%

  15. Resources for research on selective colleges • Fiske Guide to Colleges • Princeton Review: The Best 361 Colleges • Barron’s Guide to the Most Competitive Colleges • The Insider’s Guide to the Colleges • http://collegeboard.com/student/index.html?student • http://www.collegeview.com/ • http://www.collegeconfidential.com/

  16. Fiske Guide – “the top rated guide to the Best Colleges” (about 300 schools) • 19 up to 25% acceptance rate • 63 from 26 to 50% acceptance rate • 109 from 51 to 75% acceptance rate • 112 from 76 to 99% acceptance rate

  17. Ten Tips for Selective Admission • Take an appropriately challenging course of study • Visit the campus – a great measure of demonstrated interest • Be nice to the admissions representative who comes to MHS (get their business card and send them an email!) • Whenever it’s offered, do the alumni interview • Take special care with the “why us?” essay, or the “what would you add to the Class of 2012?” essay

  18. Ten tips continued • Beat the application deadline by a month – if it’s due on January 1, send in your application by Dec. 1 • Pick teachers who know you well for your recommendations – and talk to them early on! • If your college requires SAT Subject test scores, commit plenty of study time as you prepare for the exams. • Extend your college list to include both “competitive” options and “likely” options. Be realistic with your list!! • If you have a first choice school, let them know it!!

  19. Final thoughts • The goal of the college admission office is to enroll a well-rounded class – a community of individuals who add a unique talent or characteristic to the class. The operative question in selective admissions is: “What will this student add to our college?” • Make your case – why is this college a good match for you?

  20. In America, people succeed because of the quality of their character, not the fame of their college. • Know that what you do in college is a better predictor of future success and happiness than where you go to college. (from the Education Conservancy.) Phillip Trout College Counselor Minnetonka High School 952-401-5746 collegeguy@minntonka.k12.mn.us 9-11-07

More Related