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No, your senior year IS NOT the time to begin the college selection process. The college selection process must begin your junior year!!
Your junior year is perhaps the most important year of all for preparing for your academic goals. Not only do you need to concentrate on your grades this year, you also need to meet important deadlines and complete specific college planning tasks as you begin the college selection process.
Perhaps this monthly calendar of college planning details will help keep you organized and remind you of the things that you need to get done during your junior year. If you take this process month by month, it’s all manageable; otherwise, it can be overwhelming.
September
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Check with your counselor about scholarship opportunities. Keep a file of local scholarships, their deadlines, and their requirements so that you will be able to work on scholarship essays ahead of time. Get your FREE Guide to $38 million in Scholarships at Course Advisor. In addition, great places to start searching for scholarships include ScholarshipExperts and FastWeb and FastWeb Education---each has a huge scholarship database and they will customize your search to fit you. If you haven't already registered, you should register today at both sites! If you prefer to start easy, find random drawing scholarships that require little more than filling out a simple entry form such as the one found at FreeCollegeScholarships. FreeCollegeScholarships.net offers a monthly drawing for a $10K scholarship to pay your college expenses.
October
- Take the PSAT/NMSQT and do well! With a high enough score, you will qualify to receive a National Merit Scholarship or the National Achievement and the National Hispanic Scholars Program. (Remember, take your calculator with you to the test!)
TIP: If you wish to receive publications from various colleges, be sure to indicate your preference on the PSAT for the Student Search Service.
November
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Keep your grades up! Your junior year grades are extremely important in the admissions process because they are a measure of how well you do in advanced courses, and they also serve as eligibility and selection criteria for scholarships--two good reasons why extra academic effort might prove worthwhile in the end!
December
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Continue to gather college information from schools that interest you. Explore college websites, get on mailing lists, read through catalogues, and contact admission officers to answer questions you might have.
January
February
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Meet with your college counselor to go over your preliminary college list to make sure you have schools that fit in 3 tiers of admission selectivity: Reach Schools, Probable Schools, and Safety Schools. Perhaps your counselor will have other colleges that you should consider.
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Select your senior courses carefully; be sure to continue challenging yourself academically. You need to demonstrate depth and breadth in academics. Don’t plan on slacking off in your senior year! If appropriate, seriously consider taking AP classes. These courses could save you a lot of money when you enroll in college.
March
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Plan a few college visits during your April break. Call the admission office to arrange a tour, a class visit, and a meeting, even an interview with an admissions officer. if you can't afford to visit all of the colleges on your list, at least watch a video about the college showing you what really happens on campus at FreeCollegeVideos.com. They have filmed over 2000 college, including the Ivy league colleges.
April
TIP: Not all Subject test are given on every test date. Check with your teacher to see which type of Subject Test corresponds with the curriculum at your school, especially in the Foreign Language area.
May
June
- Take the SAT or the Subject Tests if you did not take them last month.
Summer
- Visit colleges, take tours, and have interviews.
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If you are an athlete, contact coaches at the schools to which you are applying to get any information you need about the process. Be sure to include an athletic resume in your correspondence with coaches.
Tip! Before submitting your resume, It would be wise to have it professionally reviewed by resume writers such as ResumeEdge so that you are sure it is a perfect product.
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Begin to work on your application; draft college essays, collect writing samples, if needed, assemble portfolios, and any other supplementary material needed. Also make sure you compile a general academic resume and have it reviewed professionally. ResumeEdge provides this service at a reasonable cost. Finally, remember to register to take a Test Prep class (Peterson's Online Test Prep is one of the best!).
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Starting in on the college selection and application process NOW can make the fall semester of your senior year so much less stressful! |