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College and University Discussion
Reply to "When did you really start college admissions prep?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I considered "college prep" to have officially started the moment there was any class track selection to be made, because in my opinion that decision impacted the next year's classes which would impact options for the next year's classes continuing like a chain of dominoes all the way through high school graduation. In MY mind, therefore, MY job as the parent to guide my children through the "college prep" process began in 2nd grade when I did what I could to support their admittance to the AAP 3rd grade class. My children were kept fairly unaware of this, however, as I did not believe putting pressure on kids at that age was appropriate. We began discussing college prep -- sort of -- when it was time to choose classes for 6th grade. By this, I mean that we talked with the kids about what a good four-year high school plan might be, in order to ensure that they used the middle school years to obtain the prerequisites they would want for the classes they wanted in ninth grade. It could be considered "college prep" because the main information we used to determine how their high school schedule should be planned was what classes were best to have for college readiness/admissions. The summer after 8th grade was when we really started planning for their extracurricular activities and volunteer endeavors. We had them do test prep and take their first SAT or ACT (depending on the kid) in 10th grade. We intended that test only for practice, but one of our kids did well enough (34 ACT) that she chose to take no further tests and to just use that score on her applications.[/quote] So you decide extra curricular activities to help in college admissions, rather than interests. Volunteer activities based on what you get back (college admissions) rather than what the kid is interested in? [b]I can only hope the colleges can see though your pathetic attempts to game the admissions. [/b] [/quote] spoken like a true middle manager destined to languish forever in mediocrity.[/quote] Which is exactly where you end up when mommy micromanages your whole childhood for you. Her poor children will have zero sense of who they are or what they want. [/quote]
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