What Happens in an Alumni Interview?

At this point during the year, students applying to colleges might have to do a few alumni interviews. These can be stressful, especially when students are trying to balance schoolwork, applications, and extracurricular activities all at one. Thankfully, alumni interviews only count for a tiny portion of a college application. 

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Midyear Check-In for High School Juniors

Junior year is halfway over, but there’s still a lot that students need to do as they prep for senior year and the college application process. There are decisions to be made about high school classes and AP (Advanced Placement) courses, as well as the AP exams themselves in May. Students might want to take the SAT and ACT during junior year or some SAT II subject exams, so they can see what areas they need to strengthen. Brainstorming ideas for college essays and asking teachers for recommendation letters are also essential. Finally, there are college visits to do and college lists that students need to make.

 

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Using Winter Break Wisely

It can be tempting for high school students to spend all of winter break relaxing and avoiding school work. However, that’ll make the second half of the school year pretty tough. Winter break can be an excellent time to catch up on college applications or to do some remedial work before classes start up again. If your teen plans out an hour or two of work each day, he or she can accomplish a lot before heading back to school in January.

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College Application Prep: Tips for NYC Students Applying to Top-tier Colleges

The SAT and ACT, and the test prep associated with both, are integral parts of your college application process. These college admittance exams serve as an objective way for institutions of higher learning to assess students--with so many variables among different schools, regions of the country, and even countries, many colleges simply want a “by-the-numbers” yardstick to compare the applicant pool. And at most colleges and universities, admissions are set up so that students from the same area, state, or region are assessed in the same applicant pool, with the same application readers. This means that, at most (but not all) top-tier universities, New York City (NYC) students will be competing against other NYC students for admittance into that institution. 

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College Application Prep NYC: An Application Checklist

For high school juniors and seniors, sending out college applications is the last hurdle before graduation. In order for this important process to go smoothly, students need to make sure that they complete each piece of their college applications in a timely manner: no one wants to sit at home alone during winter break, frantically filling out forms! For students who know that they have difficulty meeting deadlines, it may be worthwhile to consider some kind of application support. Working closely with another person will help keep students on track, especially once college essay deadlines start approaching.

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College Process Checklist:Junior and Senior Year

Once you finish tenth grade, the focus of your next two years of high school is college admissions. As the capstone of your academic career, your college years will fun, exciting, and full of new opportunities to enrich yourself academically. Consequently, you should begin preparing for this time of change by the time you begin your junior year of high school. There are many components to the college essay and a complete application; the more you plan ahead, the less stressful the entire process will be!

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College Essay Tips

By the time you get around to writing your college essay, you have probably written at least a hundred other essays already---position papers and research projects in history, literary analyses in English---essays that were much longer and that took hours of researching or poring over the pages of a novel or the lines of a poem. They were challenging, all right.  But compared to writing a college essay, they may seem like a piece of cake.

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NYC Students: Tips for Selecting a College

Every NYC high school student knows how stressful junior and senior year can be.  For the better part of both years, there is a relentless stream of responsibilities. NYC students must bolster their grades, making sure that the transcript sent out with each college application is ready to impress.  Even beyond this final push toward a stellar GPA, the work keeps piling up.  There are essays to write, SAT II subject tests (short standardized tests with a targeted focus) to study for, and the dreaded SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) or ACT (American College Testing Assessment), one of which is necessary for virtually every college application.  

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