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Presented by the Briar Woods High School School Counseling Department, Fall 2013 Juniors: Planning for Life After High School
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Why plan for the future? What are colleges looking for? What should I be doing right now?
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Why Plan?
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Life After High School: Why Plan? To control your own future To learn to think critically To become a well-rounded person To learn more about the world To the job of your choice To have great experiences To earn more money
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Life After High School: Why Plan? By the year 2020, 65% of all jobs will require post-secondary education! Those with a 4-year degree will earn 77% more lifetime income than those with just a high school diploma!
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Life After High School: Why Plan? Lifetime Earnings by Level of Education: – No High School Diploma: $1.0 million – High School Diploma: $1.4 million – Associate Degree (2-years): $ 1.8 million – Bachelor’s Degree (4-Year): $ 2.4 million – Master’s Degree: $ 2.8 million – Doctoral Degree: $ 3.5 million – Professional Degree: $ 4.2 million
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Options for Life After High School College – Associates Degree: 2-year degree (typically earned at a community college or a junior college) – Bachelor’s Degree: 4-year degree – Master’s Degree: Typically 2 additional years after earning a bachelors – Doctoral Degrees & Professional Degrees: PHD, JD, MD, DC
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Options for Life After High School Community College – Students can earn an Associates Degree, or students can complete the first year or two of a Bachelors Degree – NOVA has over 50 guaranteed admissions agreements four-year colleges and universities, and programs
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Options for Life After High School Benefits of community college – NOVA is one of the best community colleges in the country – Relatively inexpensive – Close to home – A “small step” into higher education – “Open” admissions – NOVA’s Guaranteed Admissions programs
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Options for Life After High School Trade-schools/Apprenticeships – Many “trades” have more earning potential than careers that require a 4-year degree Military – Enlisting in the military and earning a college degree are not mutually exclusive – Enlisting in the military can help pay for college – Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) is available at many colleges – Military Schools and Academies – Recruiters can provide more information
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What are Colleges Looking For?
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“The College Admissions Funnel” example: Christopher Newport, 2012 Freshman class = 1,150 Inquiry Pool (PSAT, Search pieces, campus visit, college fairs, HS visits) “Tens of Thousands” “Tens of Thousands” Thousands of applications 7,492 7,492 Accepted students 4,514 4,514
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What are Colleges Looking For? How does Christopher Newport go from 7,492 applicants to a freshman class of 1,500???? The numbers might be different, but the concept applies to all colleges!
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National Association of College Admission Counseling, 2011 Summary Percent of all colleges rating specific factors in the college admissions decision as being of “considerable importance”
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Factors of “Considerable Importance” Grades in College Prep Courses, 84% Strength of Curriculum, 68 % Standardized Admissions Tests, 59 % Grades in All Courses, 52% Essay or writing sample, 25 % Student’s Demonstrated Interest, 21% Class Rank, 19% Counselor Recommendation, 19% Teacher Recommendation, 17% Extracurricular Activities, 5% (however…)
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What are colleges looking for? “There is no secret to getting in... Stop looking for a gimmick. Tune out the hype. Study hard. Take the toughest curriculum that you can. The heart of the application is – and has always been – One’s academic preparation.” -- UVA Magazine
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What should I be doing now?
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The Junior Year Goal! Begin your senior year knowing where you want to apply to college!
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What Should I be Doing Now? We are going to give you six big areas to focus on this year >>>> For each area of focus, we will give you one or more actions to take immediately! Take action this week! This will help you get started and build momentum!
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What Should I be Doing Now? – Areas to focus on this year 1. Stay on track using checklists & calendars 2. Concentrate on your academics 3. Plan & prepare for the admissions tests 4. Participate in extracurricular activities 5. Research colleges & narrow your list 6. Behave appropriately online
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Stay on Track Using Checklists & Calendars Use the a monthly checklist – this is SUPER IMPORTANT! Use the resources available on CollegeBoard.com ACTION: Print-out a monthly checklist – BWHS website or CollegeBoard.com
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Concentrate on Your Academics Take the most challenging classes you can reasonably handle. Work Hard! You can’t “make up for” poor academics ACTION: Set goals for the grades you plan to earn this year
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Plan & Prepare for the Admissions Tests SAT Reasoning Test (“aptitude” test – designed to predict success the freshman year in college) – Critical Reading – Math – Writing ACT (“achievement” test – designed to test “what you have learned”) – English – Math – Science – Optional Writing section
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Plan & Prepare for the Admissions Tests SAT Subject Tests (your parents might remember these as “SAT Two’s”) – Usually used for placement purposes only – Not used for admissions – Subject test requirements vary greatly among different colleges
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2013-2014 SAT Dates October 5 November 2 December 7 January 25 March 8 - BWHS May 3 June 7
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2013-2014 ACT Dates September 21 October 26 December 14 - BWHS February 8 April 12 June 14
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Plan and Prepare for the Admissions Tests Hard copy registrations materials are available in the Career Center, or Register for the SAT at www.collegeboard.comwww.collegeboard.com Register for the ACT at www.act.orgwww.act.org Register early! See the BWHS Guidance website for details
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Preparing for the Tests Long-term v. Short-term preparation Get free practice tests for the SAT & ACT in the Career Center – Don’t just take it… have a “dress rehearsal” Free online CollegeBoard SAT course BWHS SAT course -.5 credit, pass/fail
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Free SAT Prep at CollegeBoard.Com Official SAT Question of the Day SAT Skills Insight My SAT Study Plan SAT Essay strategies Math and Writing reviews
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SAT/ACT Prep – Private Sources Books & Manuals – look for materials created by the testing companies themselves Private courses (PTSO) Other outside private courses
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Plan and Prepare for the Admissions Tests ACTION: Register for the SAT and/or ACT exams ACTION: Register for the SAT Online Prep Course through the BWHS website
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Participate in Extracurricular Activities Participate in the extracurricular activities that are meaningful to you – not what you think others want to see. Extracurriculars include activities inside and outside of school! Community activities are important too! Don’t be tempted to spread yourself too thin – academics come first! Be a leader! ACTION: If you don’t participate in an activity, sign-up for one. Get into a leadership position.
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Research Colleges & Narrow Your List There are well over 6,500 post-secondary institutions Over 2,500 of them are 4-year colleges and universities How do you determine where to apply???
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Research Colleges & Narrow Your List College search programs – we recommend two online programs – CollegeBoard resources – Family Connection
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Research Colleges & Narrow Your List CollegeBoard resources: – Big Future – very advanced college explorer – My College Quickstart – personalized feedback, practice and college planning based on your child’s PSAT – My Road – general college & career planner
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Big Future My Road College Quickstart
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One-stop resource for all the information and tools needed to help students make the best college decisions All new College Search - with integrated guidance - “Fit Check” to help find the best college options - Step-by-step and advanced flows Profiles on more than 3,9000 colleges Integrated Academic Tracker to help students understand college course requirements Customized Action Plans Feature Highlights
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Benefits Helps guide more students to college Helps motivate students of all backgrounds Helps to get students more engaged in college planning and to stay on track Helps steer students toward colleges where they have the best chance of success Provides reliable best practices and effective tools
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MY COLLEGE QUICKSTART
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What’s next? Use the access code on your report to log in to My College QuickStart, a personalized college and career planning kit. There you can: Search for colleges Get a personalized SAT study plan Take a personality test to find majors and careers that fit you www.collegeboard.org/quickstart Next Steps
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My College QuickStart
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My Online Score Report Projected SAT® score ranges State percentiles You can filter questions Questions and answer explanations
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My College QuickStart My SAT Study Plan™ Personalized skills to improve SAT practice questions An official SAT practice test
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My College QuickStart My College Matches Starter list of colleges Criteria to customize search Ability to save searches
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Research Colleges & Narrow Your List Family Connection – College searches – Personality type inventories – Career interest inventories – Resume builders – Colleges where our students have been accepted/where our students are attending – Scattergrams – GPA’s and SAT scores of BWHS graduates who are attending specific colleges
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After Sign in 47
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College Profile 48
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Surveys 49
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50 College Compare
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51 Scattergram
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My Applications 52
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Explore Careers 53
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Personality Type 54
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Research Colleges & Narrow Your List Mail from colleges Books/magazines Internet resources, college websites Family, friends, teachers, counselors
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Research Colleges & Narrow Your List College Visits: – Classes – Students – Campus – Dorms – Dining Halls – Surrounding Neighborhoods – Extracurricular Activities – Take notes!!!
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Research Colleges & Narrow Your List ACTION: Complete an online college search using CollegeBoard or FamilyConnection ACTION: Schedule a visit on your family’s calendar ACTION: Contact a college about tours and programs
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Behave Appropriately Online Appropriate email address Facebook, Youtube, forums, etc. If you wouldn’t put it on a resume, job application, or college application – don’t post it online! ACTION: If you need to clean anything up, do it now
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What Should I be Doing Now? Areas to focus on this year 1. Stay on track using checklists & calendars 2. Concentrate on your academics 3. Plan & prepare for the admissions tests 4. Participate in extracurricular activities 5. Research colleges & narrow your list 6. Behave appropriately online
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What Should I be Doing Now? – Actions you can take immediately Print-out a monthly checklist Create a CollegeBoard.com account Establish goals for your grades Register for the SAT and/or ACT Register for the SAT Online Prep Course Sign-up for an extracurricular activity Complete a college search Schedule a college visit Contact a college about a tour Clean-up your online presence
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What’s Next? This Year Every junior will be emailed an “e-index” Scheduling & post-secondary student/counselor conferences in the Spring GPS Career Fair in March
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What’s Next? Senior Year Fall College Information Night for Seniors Classroom presentations in early Fall Individual student/counselor conferences in the Fall Financial Aid Night in the winter (but you are welcome to attend this year too!)
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The Junior Year Goal! Begin your senior year knowing where you want to apply to college!
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