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Blog
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Blogger Breaks Summer Hiatus with SAT News
This month The College Board finally changed its policy for reporting SAT scores to colleges....
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On-line Education
Justin Pope has written top universities are catching up with the technology revolution and beginning...
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Attention, Juniors!!
If you are ending your junior year of high school and looking forward to a...
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Juniors, What Should You Do This Summer?
Colleges are looking for passion. If you want to stand out as a college applicant,...
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A Gap Year?
The Gap Year is catching on. Long popular in Europe, the Gap Year is taking...
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August is for Reading
What do University of Florida, Carleton, Skidmore, University of Vermont, and Syracuse have in common?...
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The Writing Section of the SAT is Taken More Seriously as It Grows Up
In 2007, Richie Frohlichstein wrote another article about the new writing section in the SATs....
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How Important is the New S.A.T. Writing Section?
In November, 2006, Nancy Hass, a contributor to The New York Times, wrote about the...
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Your Education and Your Career
Sometimes applying to college becomes more like a shopping spree spurred on by your friends?...
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What You Are Up Against as a College Applicant
It might be worth your reading through the seven pages of the article ?Tense Times...
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Questions to Ask on your College Visit |
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The purpose of the college visit is to discover more information about the school that you don’t already know and to verify what you have read and heard about the school. In order to accomplish this goal, you need to ask lots of questions of lots of different people you meet on campus: students, admission officers, financial aid officers, faculty members, and coaches! You should ask the questions from each category of questions below of several representatives from that group so that you can see if the answers are the same each time. It is also important to ask open-ended questions, not yes and no questions, to get fuller responses.
What kinds of questions should you ask? Here is a sample of possible questions that you might use on your visit to get you started. Feel free to add to the list if it doesn’t cover a special interest or issue that matters the most to you.
Questions to Ask Students
Questions to Ask Professors
Questions to ask Admissions Officers
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