Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish all states had public web sites equivalent to the SCHEV data for colleges and universities. Virginia is more transparent than most states.
How has this extra information helped you more than the basic info available for all schools? Can you give a few examples?
Not being snarky. Genuinely wondering about the practical applications and value of this additional information.
Anonymous wrote:- common data set
- your own high school profile
- naviance (etc) data from your high school
for 95% of kids:
- take the 5 year matriculation data from your high school. often on your school profile. This is maybe 120 colleges.
- cross out all schools that are easy omits. you probably already know if your kid has any interest in places like Julliard or West Point or Purdue or Bennington. This should bring it down to 60-80 schools.
- Take out another 20 that are either under matches or overmatches ie Eastern Kentucky and Princeton.
- if you have any other limitations like geography or religion, limit the list further.
You should be able to start junior year with 50 colleges. Next step is do a couple tours locally even if your kid has no interest in staying local. See a big school, a small school, a Jesuit school .. whatever. Try to see a couple of schools in each band of big/small/urban/suburban. This is the biggest cut of all so take your time on this one during junior year. Will you care about sports culture, frats, etc. And also think about major here.
- By spring break junior year, you'll have a list of 20-25 schools. Run the NPCs. Go look at 5 or so that are near each other. and maybe a long weekend to look at a couple more. List is down to 15-20
By end of junior year, with grades and test scores in hand, you'll get realistic about money and odds. The list will be 10-15 and you're good to apply.
I dont like message forums, but I did like podcasts.
Anonymous wrote:I wish all states had public web sites equivalent to the SCHEV data for colleges and universities. Virginia is more transparent than most states.
Anonymous wrote:New to this.
I’ve seen college confidential and reddits applying to College forum.
What do you read each for, and what else do you read that’s informative? And informative about what?
Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Another point, the only correct answer to most questions about college admissions is “it depends”, so instead of looking for a yes, no or a number, try to understand all the different angles.
Anonymous wrote:For VA public universities, the State Council on Higher Education in VA (SCHEV), has a remarkable amount of information. Most US states do not have an official authoritative information source as specific as that web site.
Anonymous wrote:I use DCUM College and CC to track when colleges release decisions. It has been very helpful for that as sometimes kids don't get emails that a decision is posted in the portal.
Anonymous wrote:This is for entertainment, not expert information. Most people here have zero experience in admissions or counseling. Reddit is a little better because they vet people who get the counselor/admissions tag.
You have access to experts. They aren't anonymous people on message boards.