Like when you click on "Tell us about the food and dining options" it takes you to these kinds of reviews? It was helpful for my kid. But you can be a Debbie Downer if you need to, in order to make yourself feel better. "Food at Cornell is FANTASTIC. Look up rankings of best food at colleges, and we're usually up there in the top 5 or so. There's food being sold in practically every building on campus, whether it's soup at the Temple of Zeus, sandwiches in Duffield, and all the delicious all-you-care-to-eat options. All of the buffet-style eateries are pretty fantastic, especially on west campus. Stay away from Okenshield's . . . that one gets a little iffy. It depends on the person, but I'll attest that it's the worst food on campus. Everything else is great and tasty and wonderful, though. If not for all the walking I do on campus, I'd have gained my freshman 15 in the first month." |
Best advice on here. As a test, I plugged in my daughter's wish list and stats. Here's what ChatGPT suggested: Wake Forest, TCU, Baylor, SMU. She just graduated from Baylor I plugged in my son. Suggestions were: Grinnell, Carleton, Macalester, Kenyon, and Denison. He graduated from Grinnell a few years ago. It was incredible how the lists Chat GPT created was nearly identical to the lists we came up with. |
I’m not sure what about my saying “read the student reviews but ignore the statistics” makes me a Debbie Downer. I think the stratospherically incorrect statistics are hysterical.
By all means, read the student reviews. Ignore the statistics. Or don’t, if you need a chuckle. |
Yes, I used the paid version of Claude last fall. It does work, but you need to put as much detail as you can. I put in my kids' stats/narrated profile and favorite (so far) schools. Also, the type of college environment, obviously major and desired oncampus ECs. I also input our private school's data (last 3 years for both matriculation and admissions) as reported to the parents by our school. To get a tailored idea of which schools regularly admit our students (and I asked Claude to analyze it in light of the request for a school list of 15-20 schools, heavy on the reaches). Lastly, the kid was test-optional at certain schools, so I asked for reach schools where TO was not always a penalty (eg. Vanderbilt, WashU, SLACs) and which schools heavily overweight ECs and awards (national-level). Got a very good list. DC got into several high reaches. Interestingly, I continued to ask/refine the prompt as EA (and merit) decisions came in, and Claude revised chancing throughout the winter. Was very accurate (got into schools with over a 40% chance, including 3 T20). |
The Common Data Set. Should be online through each college's website, or named similar. Some privates without the info which I think speaks poorly of them.
Know what's important to your student. For example: % instate vs cos, % living on campus, Freshmen retention rate, 4 or 5 yr graduation rate, number of students graduating in each major (some schools, esp small schools, have the major "they say" and yet you can see few graduate from there with the degree), % in Greek Life, stats or enrolled students |
That's way too tedious, use AI to do the first cuts. Only go to CDS later in the process. Here's a good plan: https://grownandflown.com/using-ai-college-search-list/ |
To make a school list, use one of the tools out there. There are new tools for "match-making" with schools:
Esai (school matchmaker) Appily Kollegio Sups I think even collegevine has refined its algorithm. |
I put criteria DD wanted into ChatGPT. The exact school she wanted turned up. But not rocket science. |
My kid has an incredibly idiosyncratic “package” and interests. After feeding the criteria, chat generated a very similar college list that my son had come up with on his own. I found it astounding. There is no way most college counselors could have known what to suggest for him. But chat was able to. |
I didn't put anywhere near that much into ChatGPT. I put in GPA, test scores, size preference, and wish list - for example, DD wanted school spirit, D1 football, fun traditions, but no big state schools. That's all that I put in. |
IPEDS, the Integrated Post-Secondary Educational Dataset produced by the feds has a lots of details about nearly all colleges, including useful information on how many people drop out before completing a degree:
https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/find-your-college/ If in Virginia, the State Council for Higher Education has fantastic website that goes into far more detail for nearly all local VA publics and privates. https://research.schev.edu/enrollment/B10_FreshmenProfile.asp |
When my DC was deciding between their final choices they watched a lot of YouTube and TikTok videos - a day in the life on X campus, room tours, etc. |