Anonymous wrote:We have gone through this once at a private school, and will soon go through it again at a public.
The private had great college guidance, so I'm following their schedule with DC#2 who is at a public high school.
The private school made sure every student had their common application essay FINISHED before the start of their senior year. Then the student can focus on individual essays for the schools they are applying to.
My advice: show a lot of interest in schools that your child really thinks she wants to attend. My DD got accepted at her highest "reach" school, probably because she pestered the school, visited twice, did an overnight, talked to professors, etc. She didn't end up attending that school, but she got in.
My DD got waitlisted at several "safety" schools that she never visited. I'm pretty sure these schools didn't want to admit a student they thought was unlikely to attend. All of the schools urged her to contact them if she was interested in keeping her name on the waiting list. If she hadn't gotten accepted to other schools, she would have contacted them, and I'm guessing, she'd have been admitted.
I don't think 11 is too many schools, OP. That's the reality these days. With the common app, it's easy to apply to many schools. More than 11 is too many though!
Doing what? Admissions?Anonymous wrote:(I work at a local prominent university).
Did they have a safety, and not get into it?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gone through this once at a private school, and will soon go through it again at a public.
The private had great college guidance, so I'm following their schedule with DC#2 who is at a public high school.
The private school made sure every student had their common application essay FINISHED before the start of their senior year. Then the student can focus on individual essays for the schools they are applying to.
My advice: show a lot of interest in schools that your child really thinks she wants to attend. My DD got accepted at her highest "reach" school, probably because she pestered the school, visited twice, did an overnight, talked to professors, etc. She didn't end up attending that school, but she got in.
My DD got waitlisted at several "safety" schools that she never visited. I'm pretty sure these schools didn't want to admit a student they thought was unlikely to attend. All of the schools urged her to contact them if she was interested in keeping her name on the waiting list. If she hadn't gotten accepted to other schools, she would have contacted them, and I'm guessing, she'd have been admitted.
I don't think 11 is too many schools, OP. That's the reality these days. With the common app, it's easy to apply to many schools. More than 11 is too many though!
Sadly I have to agree. From the DC area, you may have to do 10 or 11. I know of kids who applied to 10 and didn't get into any of them. It's like going to Las Vegas.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Another question: I've heard that the students should make contact with the Admissions (Counselor)Office of the schools they are most interested in attending. The websites seem to have all of the information available that we can think of, so what should she ask when she calls?
I did realize that because of her procrastination, the due dates on the calendar should really be about 7-10 days before the "REAL" deadline. I didn't consider that thousands of students may also be trying to submit apps the same time, and could possible crash the server or at 10pm on the evening of the deadline, our internet goes down, and the libraries are already closed. Trying to think ahead of the possible disasters.
What else should we try to anticipate that could go wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gone through this once at a private school, and will soon go through it again at a public.
The private had great college guidance, so I'm following their schedule with DC#2 who is at a public high school.
The private school made sure every student had their common application essay FINISHED before the start of their senior year. Then the student can focus on individual essays for the schools they are applying to.
My advice: show a lot of interest in schools that your child really thinks she wants to attend. My DD got accepted at her highest "reach" school, probably because she pestered the school, visited twice, did an overnight, talked to professors, etc. She didn't end up attending that school, but she got in.
My DD got waitlisted at several "safety" schools that she never visited. I'm pretty sure these schools didn't want to admit a student they thought was unlikely to attend. All of the schools urged her to contact them if she was interested in keeping her name on the waiting list. If she hadn't gotten accepted to other schools, she would have contacted them, and I'm guessing, she'd have been admitted.
I don't think 11 is too many schools, OP. That's the reality these days. With the common app, it's easy to apply to many schools. More than 11 is too many though!
Sadly I have to agree. From the DC area, you may have to do 10 or 11. I know of kids who applied to 10 and didn't get into any of them. It's like going to Las Vegas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-1 11 is way too many if you have serious interest in some. You cannot reasonably focus on that many schools.
A friend's son applied to 29.
Anonymous wrote:-1 11 is way too many if you have serious interest in some. You cannot reasonably focus on that many schools.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Another question: I've heard that the students should make contact with the Admissions (Counselor)Office of the schools they are most interested in attending. The websites seem to have all of the information available that we can think of, so what should she ask when she calls?
I did realize that because of her procrastination, the due dates on the calendar should really be about 7-10 days before the "REAL" deadline. I didn't consider that thousands of students may also be trying to submit apps the same time, and could possible crash the server or at 10pm on the evening of the deadline, our internet goes down, and the libraries are already closed. Trying to think ahead of the possible disasters.
What else should we try to anticipate that could go wrong?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Another question: I've heard that the students should make contact with the Admissions (Counselor)Office of the schools they are most interested in attending. The websites seem to have all of the information available that we can think of, so what should she ask when she calls?
I did realize that because of her procrastination, the due dates on the calendar should really be about 7-10 days before the "REAL" deadline. I didn't consider that thousands of students may also be trying to submit apps the same time, and could possible crash the server or at 10pm on the evening of the deadline, our internet goes down, and the libraries are already closed. Trying to think ahead of the possible disasters.
What else should we try to anticipate that could go wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:11 schools is too many . . .
not today..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gone through this once at a private school, and will soon go through it again at a public.
The private had great college guidance, so I'm following their schedule with DC#2 who is at a public high school.
The private school made sure every student had their common application essay FINISHED before the start of their senior year. Then the student can focus on individual essays for the schools they are applying to.
My advice: show a lot of interest in schools that your child really thinks she wants to attend. My DD got accepted at her highest "reach" school, probably because she pestered the school, visited twice, did an overnight, talked to professors, etc. She didn't end up attending that school, but she got in.
My DD got waitlisted at several "safety" schools that she never visited. I'm pretty sure these schools didn't want to admit a student they thought was unlikely to attend. All of the schools urged her to contact them if she was interested in keeping her name on the waiting list. If she hadn't gotten accepted to other schools, she would have contacted them, and I'm guessing, she'd have been admitted.
I don't think 11 is too many schools, OP. That's the reality these days. With the common app, it's easy to apply to many schools. More than 11 is too many though!
It can only be that if a student applies to 10 or 11 schools and is NOT accepted at any....then those school had to be out of range or certain at the edge of the range grade/test score wise.
Sadly I have to agree. From the DC area, you may have to do 10 or 11. I know of kids who applied to 10 and didn't get into any of them. It's like going to Las Vegas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gone through this once at a private school, and will soon go through it again at a public.
The private had great college guidance, so I'm following their schedule with DC#2 who is at a public high school.
The private school made sure every student had their common application essay FINISHED before the start of their senior year. Then the student can focus on individual essays for the schools they are applying to.
My advice: show a lot of interest in schools that your child really thinks she wants to attend. My DD got accepted at her highest "reach" school, probably because she pestered the school, visited twice, did an overnight, talked to professors, etc. She didn't end up attending that school, but she got in.
My DD got waitlisted at several "safety" schools that she never visited. I'm pretty sure these schools didn't want to admit a student they thought was unlikely to attend. All of the schools urged her to contact them if she was interested in keeping her name on the waiting list. If she hadn't gotten accepted to other schools, she would have contacted them, and I'm guessing, she'd have been admitted.
I don't think 11 is too many schools, OP. That's the reality these days. With the common app, it's easy to apply to many schools. More than 11 is too many though!
It can only be that if a student applies to 10 or 11 schools and is NOT accepted at any....then those school had to be out of range or certain at the edge of the range grade/test score wise.
Sadly I have to agree. From the DC area, you may have to do 10 or 11. I know of kids who applied to 10 and didn't get into any of them. It's like going to Las Vegas.
Anonymous wrote:We have gone through this once at a private school, and will soon go through it again at a public.
The private had great college guidance, so I'm following their schedule with DC#2 who is at a public high school.
The private school made sure every student had their common application essay FINISHED before the start of their senior year. Then the student can focus on individual essays for the schools they are applying to.
My advice: show a lot of interest in schools that your child really thinks she wants to attend. My DD got accepted at her highest "reach" school, probably because she pestered the school, visited twice, did an overnight, talked to professors, etc. She didn't end up attending that school, but she got in.
My DD got waitlisted at several "safety" schools that she never visited. I'm pretty sure these schools didn't want to admit a student they thought was unlikely to attend. All of the schools urged her to contact them if she was interested in keeping her name on the waiting list. If she hadn't gotten accepted to other schools, she would have contacted them, and I'm guessing, she'd have been admitted.
I don't think 11 is too many schools, OP. That's the reality these days. With the common app, it's easy to apply to many schools. More than 11 is too many though!