Posts Tagged ‘schools’

soapbox quickie: parsing the Syracuse essay

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

The Syracuse application asks whether you’ve had a paid job and, if so, what it taught you. Syracuse is really asking two things: whether you’ve had to earn things in your life instead of having them given to you, and (relatedly) whether you have a strong work ethic.

Consider every application to be asking these questions.

Work ethic should emanate from every part of an application: grades, extracurriculars, recommendations. Your whole application should show (and this is a life principle, really) that whatever privileges you’ve had, you’ve also worked very hard (i.e., that if you’ve been lucky enough to go to a great school, you’ve worked like crazy to learn and excel there). That seems pretty obvious, but it’s important to remember.

And regarding the paid job thing: colleges are justifiably impressed by someone who works for money. Not only on applications, but also in life, plan to be able to say, “Yes, I’ve worked.” Working in a store or restaurant is good. Babysitting, odd jobs, and camp counseling are also fine. Realistically, it’s been really difficult for teenagers to get any jobs in the past two years, so your answer to the job question could also be: “No. Because I didn’t have to work/couldn’t find a job, I was able to spend my time volunteering/interning/taking care of my siblings. Here’s what I did/learned.”

from the mouths of admissions deans

Monday, December 7th, 2009

A panel of admissions nabobs from Wesleyan, Penn, Marquette, Princeton, Bryn Mawr, Grinnell, UVM, and Williams appeared last week in a movie-length Internet broadcast, via WSJ and Unigo, worth watching in its entirety. (Part I, however, is missing.) Highlights include stuff about the “backyard” advantage of local applicants, renegotiating aid offers, whether admissions officers look at Facebook pages (yes, of reported cyberbullies), resumes (they “hate” them), preparing for admissions as early as middle school (“I don’t want a seventh or eighth grader to think, ‘this is what they want,’ and have it drive the next six years”), and humor on the essay (redacted: “If you’re funny, be funny. If you’re not funny, don’t try it. Be very authentic.”)

Oh, yeah, and if you strangle your personality and stomp on your passions so you can become some sanitized (and probably inaccurate) image of the perfect applicant, says one dean:

“That’s going to lead you down a bad path. Because you’re going to get to an institution that isn’t…the right place for you.”

public universities, out-of-staters

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

US News & World Report, self-appointed grande dame of rankings, just published a list of the best colleges for out-of-state students. Because the list is based entirely on percentages of out-of-staters at each school, its utility is limited–i.e., it doesn’t actually tell you anything about out-of-state admissions/ financial aid standards, proximity to major airports, costs, quality of life, academics, graduation rates, or basically anything else of any concern to you. But it’s worth looking at. Interesting finds: most U of Delaware and U of Vermont (UVM) students are from out-of-state; fewer than 10% of Berkeley and U of Texas students are.

The list also confirms reports that public universities are now taking more out-of-staters (because out-of-staters pay more).

UC tuition hike

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Public universities are responding to the economic crisis in a bunch of different, awful (although not necessarily worse than their alternatives) ways. The New York Times reports tonight that tuition will go up 32% for University of California undergrads (that means Berkeley, UCLA, UC Santa Cruz, etc). From the article:

“Rodrigo Verdugo, 18, a freshman at the San Marcos campus and the first in his family to go to college, carried a sign that said ‘no fee hikes.’ He said he worried that if his parents, migrant farm workers from Mexico, could not afford state university fees, his younger siblings ‘might have to work in the fields, too, if this becomes so expensive.’”

And from the SF Chronicle:

“Regent Eddie Island had never voted for a fee increase before, but said the budget crisis was so severe he had no choice.

‘I understand the burden that fee increases place on students and their families,’ he told the board. ‘Some people around this table were poor and had very humble beginnings. But we’ve got to balance the budget. I believe the increases are now necessary.’”

No news yet on how out-of-state tuition will be affected. Stay tuned.

youth and LGBT rights round-up

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

For ordinary news about LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) rights in schools, I highly recommend the GLSEN blog. (Check out the GLSEN website for gay-straight alliance resources and more.) But this week’s LGBT youth news is so wild that I would be remiss not to recap it for you myself. Ranging from the sublime to the horrifying:

A 10-year-old Arkansas boy decides that the Pledge of Allegiance conflicts with discrimination.

A much cuter version of me represents her residential college in my alma mater’s Mr. Yale competition.

An Georgia teacher allegedly tries to order a hit on a gay student. Yes, you read that right!

admissions open houses in Brooklyn: what’s left

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Here’s the most current open house info for Brooklyn’s top independent (i.e., private) K-12s:

Berkeley-Carroll pre-K and high school admissions open houses are all booked until December, but spots are still available in the middle school open houses on 11/17 and 11/19. A bunch of December pre-K sessions are still open. (Deadline: 12/1.)

Brooklyn Friends admissions tours are almost all past and/or filled; you can still sign up for the last upper school tour on 12/10. (Deadline for grades 2-11: 12/11.)

Packer open houses on 11/18 (kindergarten), 12/2 (kindergarten), 12/9 (grades 1-4) may still have open slots. (Deadline: 12/1.)

Poly Prep info sessions are over for the season. Just pitch your hat in the ring. (Deadline: 12/1.)

St Ann’s tours continue through January. (Deadline: 12/1.) Sad fact: the fours program is already full.