Anonymous wrote:You should really attend the meeting if the AO visits your school
Anonymous wrote:How do large public schools host admissions officer visits? I imagine the individual face time would be limited due to the sheer numbers of students. For this reason I feel fortunate that my daughter attends a small private school with a very good relationship with her first choice college.
Not always. Some offices use assistant director for their full-time entry level staff. Just don't assume one office's structure is the same as another's.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are two different people that are being labeled with the same title in this forum.
First, there are regional reps. They live in a territory and represent a university that is usually pretty far away. They will visit high schools and do events like college fairs regularly in the region. The DC Metro has a ton of regional reps.
Second, admission officers at each college have a territory. They don’t live in their territory. They may travel to the area for school visit and some events, but most of their year is spent at their college.
Regional reps tend to be very low level and easy to interact with because they are constantly present in the area. Admission officers are not in the area as much, and therefore it can be harder to create a relationship with them.
All schools have admission officers, but all schools do not have regional reps.
Look at the title of regional reps aka AO’s living in the DC area. Admission counselor is entry level, assistant or associate director is much higher up the food chain.
Anonymous wrote:At my DC’s private school, sometimes only 3-4 students would show up when the rep visited so they would just chat for an hour. My DC felt comfortable reaching out by email after that as the rep knew her.
Anonymous wrote:I see on here people recommending that kids get to know their regional admissions representative from schools they want to go to - how does this work? How do you meet those people?
Anonymous wrote:There are two different people that are being labeled with the same title in this forum.
First, there are regional reps. They live in a territory and represent a university that is usually pretty far away. They will visit high schools and do events like college fairs regularly in the region. The DC Metro has a ton of regional reps.
Second, admission officers at each college have a territory. They don’t live in their territory. They may travel to the area for school visit and some events, but most of their year is spent at their college.
Regional reps tend to be very low level and easy to interact with because they are constantly present in the area. Admission officers are not in the area as much, and therefore it can be harder to create a relationship with them.
All schools have admission officers, but all schools do not have regional reps.