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Index Page » Academics & Education » College Listing
 

Tips On College Selection

 

It is highly recommended that early in the college selection process, parents and student(s) visit some schools to determine if theyll be suitable. The criteria that must be considered before any college is applied to include:

Average GPA, SAT I, class rank for acceptance
The school should offer enough choices in the event the student changes their major
Size, location, Greeks, religious affiliation
Percentage of freshmen that return for year two
Percentage of freshmen that graduate in four years
Percentage of financial need met
Percentage of gift aid/self-help awarded
On or off campus job opportunities
Meal plans and dietary situations met
Name recognition
Student/teacher ratio
Average class size, semester or trimester
Percentage of professors who teach and percentage of teaching assistants
2 or 4-year college or university
Co-ed dorms
Freshman cars permitted
Handicap accessibility
Cost of the sheepskin

It is also recommended that you determine if the school uses a need-blind or need-sensitive admissions policy. Need-blind is a practice where the student is evaluated without any regard to family income or assets. Need-sensitive is a shameful policy used by a host of elite schools such as Duke, Emory and Stanford. These schools will admit a less than qualified rich kid in anticipation of a large contribution to their own endowment funds. In essence, the wealthy family has bought an admission ticket to a school where their student might never have otherwise been accepted!

Its anyones guess how many other schools enrich their coffers in this deceitful, unprincipled manner. Duke has even been brazenly open about this policy, and I find it curious that shortly after reaching their $2 billion fund raising goal in 2003, they reduced their freshman acceptance percentage from 7.5% to 4%. The words of Former U.S. Representative Shirley Chisholm (D-NY) come to mind here, When morality comes up against profit, it is seldom that profit loses.

Parents and student(s) should make the official unofficial visit to potential schools no later than the 10th grade. Colleges are always impressed when a 9th or 10th grader pays a visit. By keeping in touch with officials youve met, in essence, you will have added points to both your GPA and SAT I scores by establishing a rapport. When the time comes, administrators will be able to associate a face with your application. This helps a merely qualified student become a far more acceptable one.

However, before packing your bags and filling up the SUV with gas, make a checklist that includes the following:

Confirm that everything you plan to visit will be open and, ideally, that school is in session. Ask plenty of questions and be an attentive listener. Consider bringing a video camera or tape recorder for your notes no matter how good your memory is. Find out who reads applications from your area and, if possible, try to meet with a reader and be sure to keep in touch with them.

Student athletes should meet with a coach or two. Listen to the school radio station and get a copy of the campus newspaper. If the student has Greek intentions, visit some frat or sorority houses. Students should check out the dorm unannounced, introduce themselves to attending students and pick their brains.

Have a snack in the cafeteria. After all, their food is what the student will be eating for the next four years! Students who have decided upon their course of study should make every effort to arrange a meeting with the head of that particular department and audit a class or two. This may require an overnight, giving the student a greater opportunity to check out the dorm.

These are some college selection websites I recommend:

For alternative criteria go to www.fairtest.org or call 617-864-4810. They have a list of some 300 schools that apply non-traditional guidelines in the Admissions Process.

Afro-American schools: www.blackhighereducation.com/hbcu.html

Jesuit schools: www.ajcunet.edu

Jewish affiliation: www.hillel.org

Trade and vocational schools: www.overview.com/colleges/

This is one of a series of articles by college admissions and financial aid expert, Reecy Aresty, based on his book, Getting Into College And Paying For It! For further information or to contact him, please visit www.thecollegebook.com.

Author: Reecy Aresty
 
Author Bio:

Reecy Aresty

For almost three decades, financial advisor Reecy Aresty, has helped thousands of families protect their assets, increase their wealth and reduce their taxes. During the 1980?s, he mastered the complexities of college admissions & financial aid, and by the end of the decade, he was already saving his clients thousands of dollars on a college education!

In 1986, made possible by a generous gift from the Aresty family, the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania established the Aresty Institute of Executive Education. So began the Aresty family legacy; a dedication to the pursuit of knowledge through higher education for all.

In 1999, Reecy founded College Assistance, Inc., dedicated to helping parents provide their children with the best possible education for less than they ever imagined! He is the author of the groundbreaking new book, ?Getting Into College And Paying For It.? Filled with trade secrets, insider information and innovative money saving strategies, it is guaranteed to legally cut the costs of a college education!

Reecy?s SPECIAL REPORT on page 126 reveals the trappings of the Tuition And Fees Deduction which Robin-hoodwinks middle and lower income families by taking from them and giving to the rich! Reecy alerts families to what even many accountants have missed - how those who chose the Deduction in 2002, 2003 and/or 2004, who qualified for either of the Education Credits, are guaranteed refunds from the IRS! Knowledge of this prevented countless families from making the same mistake, and Reecy has been instrumental in recovering tens of thousands in overpaid taxes!

In 2004 alone, overall, he saved families hundreds of thousands of dollars! His clients receive a free financial evaluation that reveals how they can legally eliminate or reduce costly assessments from the schools and the federal government. This significantly lowers their Expected Family Contribution, the minimum amount each family must pay at any college (for each student), and maximizes their eligibility for financial aid. He even helps families negotiate with the schools to obtain the absolute best possible financial aid package!

Reecy Aresty has become a major factor in obtaining affordable, quality educations for America?s students. In doing so, he has restored the faith people used to have in one another by proving that there are still people who care, people who can be trusted, and people who actually do what they promise ? and get results.

This article can be searched using: online colleges, community colleges, hottest guys colleges, christian colleges
 
 
 

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