Anonymous wrote:When do we start having access to that Naviance data? My kid is a freshman.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, sounds like you blinked and missed it.
Its actually way better at HBW, where the teachers are the counselors, and they are responsible for like 50 kids. At least they might know your students name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid's at WL but I don't think it's that different than Yorktown. The dedicated college counselor will send out emails about summer programs, scholarships, college reps coming to visit the school, alumni chats, etc. They don't meet 1:1 with your kid to talk about college. Your kid should be assigned a regular counselor and they will meet with them each year around this time to talk about scheduling. In junior year they will also ask what they are thinking about for college. Oh, and they will write the required letter of recommendation for colleges, but you need to provide them with all the information because they basically don't know one kid from the next. If you want advice on what colleges to apply to or what might be target colleges, you really need to do your own research or hire a private counselor. They do make Naviance data available to parents and kids so that can be helpful to see where kids from the school have applied in the past, whether they got accepted/denied/waitlisted and what their stats are (anonymously).
The experience is roughly the same at Wakefield.
Exactly the same for my Yorktown senior. We did a lot of our own research.
I'm not understanding why people are in such a kerfuffle about this. Why should schools provide 1:1 college counseling? Why isn't the stuff mentioned above that our schools currently do sufficient?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid's at WL but I don't think it's that different than Yorktown. The dedicated college counselor will send out emails about summer programs, scholarships, college reps coming to visit the school, alumni chats, etc. They don't meet 1:1 with your kid to talk about college. Your kid should be assigned a regular counselor and they will meet with them each year around this time to talk about scheduling. In junior year they will also ask what they are thinking about for college. Oh, and they will write the required letter of recommendation for colleges, but you need to provide them with all the information because they basically don't know one kid from the next. If you want advice on what colleges to apply to or what might be target colleges, you really need to do your own research or hire a private counselor. They do make Naviance data available to parents and kids so that can be helpful to see where kids from the school have applied in the past, whether they got accepted/denied/waitlisted and what their stats are (anonymously).
The experience is roughly the same at Wakefield.
Exactly the same for my Yorktown senior. We did a lot of our own research.
I'm not understanding why people are in such a kerfuffle about this. Why should schools provide 1:1 college counseling? Why isn't the stuff mentioned above that our schools currently do sufficient?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid's at WL but I don't think it's that different than Yorktown. The dedicated college counselor will send out emails about summer programs, scholarships, college reps coming to visit the school, alumni chats, etc. They don't meet 1:1 with your kid to talk about college. Your kid should be assigned a regular counselor and they will meet with them each year around this time to talk about scheduling. In junior year they will also ask what they are thinking about for college. Oh, and they will write the required letter of recommendation for colleges, but you need to provide them with all the information because they basically don't know one kid from the next. If you want advice on what colleges to apply to or what might be target colleges, you really need to do your own research or hire a private counselor. They do make Naviance data available to parents and kids so that can be helpful to see where kids from the school have applied in the past, whether they got accepted/denied/waitlisted and what their stats are (anonymously).
The experience is roughly the same at Wakefield.
Exactly the same for my Yorktown senior. We did a lot of our own research.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid's at WL but I don't think it's that different than Yorktown. The dedicated college counselor will send out emails about summer programs, scholarships, college reps coming to visit the school, alumni chats, etc. They don't meet 1:1 with your kid to talk about college. Your kid should be assigned a regular counselor and they will meet with them each year around this time to talk about scheduling. In junior year they will also ask what they are thinking about for college. Oh, and they will write the required letter of recommendation for colleges, but you need to provide them with all the information because they basically don't know one kid from the next. If you want advice on what colleges to apply to or what might be target colleges, you really need to do your own research or hire a private counselor. They do make Naviance data available to parents and kids so that can be helpful to see where kids from the school have applied in the past, whether they got accepted/denied/waitlisted and what their stats are (anonymously).
The experience is roughly the same at Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote:My kid's at WL but I don't think it's that different than Yorktown. The dedicated college counselor will send out emails about summer programs, scholarships, college reps coming to visit the school, alumni chats, etc. They don't meet 1:1 with your kid to talk about college. Your kid should be assigned a regular counselor and they will meet with them each year around this time to talk about scheduling. In junior year they will also ask what they are thinking about for college. Oh, and they will write the required letter of recommendation for colleges, but you need to provide them with all the information because they basically don't know one kid from the next. If you want advice on what colleges to apply to or what might be target colleges, you really need to do your own research or hire a private counselor. They do make Naviance data available to parents and kids so that can be helpful to see where kids from the school have applied in the past, whether they got accepted/denied/waitlisted and what their stats are (anonymously).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your best bet is to hire a private college counselor. Your child will not get individual attention from their high school counselor to build a college list in this college environment.
1000% this. You're not getting any personalized college counseling. You have to hire a private counselor if that is what you want. Chances are you counselor won't even know who your kid is.
Anonymous wrote:Your best bet is to hire a private college counselor. Your child will not get individual attention from their high school counselor to build a college list in this college environment.
Anonymous wrote:Adding to my comment at 14:08
You “saved” money not sending your child to private school but the downside is nonexistent college counseling. Its going to cost you 4-6k for a private college counselor but you are over all head money wise.
Anonymous wrote:Question is specifically about college counseling, not how HB teachers are also mentors/untrained counselors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, sounds like you blinked and missed it.
Its actually way better at HBW, where the teachers are the counselors, and they are responsible for like 50 kids. At least they might know your students name.
This is HBW's actual model? That's terrible. Honestly. Being a teacher and being a counselor is not the same job and also being a counselor should not be a side job for a teacher.
50 kids? What? At H-B each teacher is also a TA and are responsible for 10-15 kids, and the TAs/homerooms are across all 4 grades so they only have 3-4 seniors at a time to be assisting with the college process.
Tangent. The question was specifically about the comprehensive high schools and college counseling. NOT about how HB handles things.
Thank you to those who have actually provided helpful answers.