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Tuesday, October 24, 2017

The hardest test of freshman year? Survival.

  Published in The Washington Post
Over the past several weeks, millions of young adults went off to college for the first time. My Facebook feed was filled with pictures of parents and their tear-filled goodbyes as they dropped off their kids on campuses to begin their next chapter in life.
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For students and parents, the beginning of freshman year is often the culmination of a year or more of searching for the perfect match in a college. It is filled with hope and joy, but what colleges rarely tell prospective students is that it’s also filled with plenty of failures. As the author and columnist Frank Bruni recently pointed out, the freshman year of college is a lonely one for many students.
It’s also the year when most students drop out. In 2015, only a little more than half of students who enrolled in college in 2009 made it to graduation, with the largest percentage leaving after their freshman year, according to the National Student Clearinghouse.
“For far too many students, the first year of college is still a pretty dismal experience,” said George L. Mehaffy, vice president for academic leadership and change at the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. “But it doesn’t have to be.”
Mehaffy is leading a project with 44 public universities to redesign the first year of college. Most students and parents think that if they made it through high school and were accepted to college, they’ll jump through the next hoop without a problem. Students go off to college with plenty of worries, but finishing their degree is usually not one of them.
The reasons freshmen get derailed that first year are varied.
Academics, of course, play a big role. More than one-third of students say the transition to college classes was difficult for them, according to a survey of freshmen by the Higher Education Research Institute at the University of California at Los Angeles. For many students, high school was a breeze, and they had a support network of parents and teachers who directed their learning every step of the way. That safety net disappears when they get to college. In the UCLA survey, some students reported they found it difficult to manage their time effectively, develop effective study skills, or understand what professors expect.
Another problem is that too many freshmen treat college as a spectator sport, waiting for it to happen to them. They sit back and wait for professors to deliver lessons in the classroom. They participate in campus life but too often from the sidelines, so they lack any deep engagement in activities. They fail to cultivate relationships with professors or staff on campus who might lend advice and act as mentors. Nearly one-third of freshmen seriously consider leaving school during their first year, according to the National Survey of Student Engagement, an annual poll of freshmen and seniors.
The freshman year of college is in desperate need of a makeover.
One urgent need is to fix the first-year curriculum. “It lacks both relevance and coherence for the students that experience it,” Mehaffy said.
Students have too many choices, and rather than find that liberating, they are paralyzed by it. Even if they have declared a major, many students arrive without really knowing what they want to do, or have aspirations that never match their talents. A student may want to be a nurse but runs into trouble with biology, or aspires to be an engineer but fail math. Or they fail to see the relevance of introductory courses to what they want to do in life. Colleges need to build clearer pathways through four years so students can better see and understand their route to a degree.
That pathway could start in high school. About one in four freshmen take college-level courses during high school as part of dual enrollment programs. Students who took academically rigorous dual-credit courses were significantly more engaged in the first year of college, according to the student-engagement survey.
Another key reform is to force freshmen to engage early on and find their “tribe” so that they don’t feel lonely — and that should start with where they live. After a decade of building luxury dorms with private bedrooms, bathrooms and kitchens, a few colleges are beginning to move back to the basics. Georgia State University has recently built dorms with smaller rooms and dining halls on the ground floor to reduce costs for students and increase a sense of community. The University of Delaware just opened a new freshman residential complex that is at the center of the academic campus and has plenty of lounge and study space to allow students to make friends and feel more connected.
Finally, professors play a key role in students’ success, but often freshmen are stuck in large lecture-style classes in which they rarely get to talk with faculty members and find themselves interacting with graduate teaching assistants or part-time professors.
In many ways, first-year students need intense, close encounters with faculty more than upperclassmen do. About two out of five freshmen say they have “never discussed ideas from readings or classes with faculty members outside of class.” Three out of five freshmen say they never worked with professors on activities other than coursework, according to the student engagement survey. Colleges should figure out ways to provide smaller classes for freshmen even if they have to cut back on them for upperclassmen.
When freshmen arrive on many campuses, they are given a survey from UCLA that measures their well-being, political beliefs and what they hope to achieve in college. In the most recent version of that survey, 86 percent of freshmen said they expected to graduate in four years. The reality is that fewer than 40 percent do, and the first year of college has emerged as the most critical barrier to students succeeding.
Selingo is the author of There Is Life After College, about how today’s graduates launch into their careers. He is former editor of the Chronicle of Higher Education, a professor of practice at Arizona State University, a trustee of Ithaca College and a visiting scholar at Georgia Tech's Center for 21st Century Universities.

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

40K IN SCHOLARSHIPS FOR STUDENT LEADERS

$40,000 IN COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS FOR YOUR STUDENT LEADERS

 



High school seniors who demonstrate exceptional leadership, drive, integrity, and citizenship are invited to apply for the 2018 GE-Reagan Foundation Scholarship Program. This program annually provides college-bound students with $10,000 renewable scholarships – up to $40,000 total per recipient – and supports them as they lead and serve in college and beyond.
Help put promising young leaders in the running for this prestigious award. Share this news with scholars who exemplify these characteristics inside and outside the classroom and encourage them to apply. Download a program flyer here.
Applications for the GE-Reagan Foundation Scholarship Program will be accepted online until January 4, 2018. Additional information, eligibility requirements, and a link to the application are available online. You may also follow us on Facebook.
We look forward to honoring these deserving student leaders next spring.
MORE OPPORTUNITIES FOR OUTSTANDING STUDENT LEADERS
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LEARN

Spend your Summer or Semester in Washington, D.C. interning and growing as a leader in our university program.
 
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ACHIEVE

$50,000 in scholarships for outstanding high school communicators.
 
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LEAD

Join us for our annual Leadership Summit on Saturday, November 11, 2017 for an unforgettable conference on collaboration.
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The Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute
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Thursday, September 28, 2017

Finding the Perfect College(s)

Finding the Perfect College(s)
09/21/2017 01:39 pm ET  (Reprinted from Huff Post) 


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This fall many high school seniors are focused on choosing and applying to colleges. As a mom of one of those high school seniors and the president of a highly selective liberal arts college, my child gets the benefit of a lot of insight into the schools he is considering and into the application process itself. Despite the transparency and comfort I have in knowing the ins and outs, I still see in my child (and feel in my own heart) all manner of worries and concerns. I imagine it is much more stressful for students and families who know less about the process. It is in the spirit of reducing stress that I offer some of the “wisdom” that I have tried to share with my child in the hopes that it may help others.
Don’t focus on finding the one perfect school, but develop a set of similar options. If you create this strong set, your final choice will very likely become the perfect choice.One of the important virtues of American higher education is the great variety of colleges and universities. But you will certainly find groupings of schools that share strong similarities on the things that matter to you. Choosing among schools within a grouping may be hard, but less consequential than creating the group that best meets your interests.
There are important elements to finding that right set of schools for a particular individual, such as an appropriate level of academic challenge, location, size, and the sense of campus community. But once you find schools that generally match on these types of important variables, it will be hard to make a bad choice.
Of course, the colleges in your set will each have distinctive qualities: traditions that students have shaped over decades (or centuries), a sports team with an epic winning streak, or maybe a great local hangout with a fantastic house band. Although these specific characteristics will differ, they will become part of a college experience that you will never forget and that will be at the heart of campus community. That sense of identity, fun, and belonging will be elements of what will create a sense of “fit” once you arrive on campus.
Cost of attendance is a critical factor, but often the actual cost of attendance can’t be known until financial aid has been awarded. Some of the most expensive and well-regarded private colleges and universities can often cost less than public institutions because many private institutions meet full, demonstrated financial need and provide generous financial aid. So don’t rule out a choice for financial reasons until you have found out what the actual cost of attendance will be.
Don’t choose a school solely based on the presence of a single program. Fewer than 20% of students wind up majoring in what they believe they are interested in before they enter college. For many students the first two years of college are a time for exploration and direction changes. Students who have selected a college only because they wanted a particular program may run into trouble if there aren’t other appealing majors. The presence of a particular program isn’t irrelevant, but finding a place that has more than one attractive program or feature means there will be options in the likely event that a student’s interests shift. (While it always is possible to transfer, families should understand that many colleges and universities are much harder to get into as a transfer student and that financial aid for transfer students is often less favorable).Subscribe
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An admissions decision is not a pronouncement on your worth as a human being. Many colleges are incredibly hard to get into. At the most selective, fewer than 1 in 10 applicants are accepted. These schools could likely fill their classes several times over with students with perfect SAT scores and GPAs above 4.0, so even most “perfect students” find themselves rejected. Even if the percentage of applicants that are accepted is greater, the majority of people who apply do not get into colleges described as “selective” or “highly selective.”
While the admissions process at most schools is an intentional, thoughtful, and holistic consideration of each student’s unique strengths, it is best from the student’s point of view to see the process as random. Students should put forward their best self and hope that they get lucky. Schools for their part are looking to shape a well-rounded and diverse class. The reasons for rejection will likely be things beyond the student’s control. This part of the process is the most difficult to accept. Students will weather it best if they understand that in many ways the decision is not a statement of their value.
To be sure, there are ways that students lower their chances of admission — for example, failing to complete all parts of the application; answering the “Why X College?” essay question with a generic essay that shows the student knows nothing about X College and couldn’t be bothered to find out; or even recycling an essay from a different college and not bothering to find all of the places to switch the names. On the other hand, while essays are important in allowing the admissions officer to get to know you, it is rare that someone gains admission to a school based solely on an essay — so keep that in perspective.
The crucial point that I try to make to my son and others is that it is important to do the work to try to create the right set of schools. While the opportunity to visit campus is the best way when possible, college websites have gotten better and better at conveying a sense of the place. Search engines can generate lists of schools that share important features. In high schools that have them, guidance counselors can be an excellent resource. Increasingly, community-based organizations and non-profits provide resources to students who might not find that support in their school system.
Social media also makes it possible to connect with current students and alums from a particular school. They can be great sources of information as long as prospective students remember that they are only getting one individual’s view or experience.
So create the set of schools that you think is right for you, complete the application fully and honestly, and then (try to) relax. You may get into your top choice. And if you don’t, but you were careful in creating your larger set of choices, the school that selects you will be lucky to have you. You’ll fall in love with the school you attend and thrive. By the time you graduate, you’ll find yourself saying, “I couldn’t have made a better choice.”


Monday, September 25, 2017

Colleges and Universities Come to You!

Here are a number of opportunities for our students and families to learn about a variety of colleges and programs without the time and expense of a visit to the school(s). They are primarily intended for seniors and juniors and their families but sophomores can also attend.

I highly recommend attending the programs that are of interest to you.  In particular, the college fairs will allow students to gain exposure to a large number of colleges as well as other important resources in the college search. The individual college programs allow students to meet admission officers and gain in-depth knowledge of that school.

I hope you will take advantage of at least some of these programs!



Boca Raton Community High School College and Career Fair
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
6:00-8:00 PM
Boca High Gymnasium
Attended by over 100 colleges, universities, technical schools, tutoring and test prep agencies and more!
No RSVP necessary!

Learn More About Dartmouth
Wednesday, September 27, 2017
6:30 PM
Saint Andrew’s School, Roberts Theater
3900 Jog Rod
Boca Raton, FL 33434

Johns Hopkins Information Session
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
7:00 PM
Miami Airport Marriott
Grand Ballroom, 1201 NW LeJeune Rd, Bldg. A

National Association of College Admission Counseling South Florida National College Fair
Sunday, October 1, 2017
1:00-4:00 PM
Greater Fort Lauderdale/Broward County Convention Center
Attended by over 150 colleges!
Multiple free workshops!
Register for free today!  You will receive a barcode at the end of your registration.  Screenshot it or print it and bring it to the fair with you. 

Discover MIT
Monday, October 2, 2017
7:00-8:30 PM
Miami Dade College Wolfson Campus
Room 2016 (Building 2, Room 16)
300 NE 2nd Ave
Miami, FL 33132
No RSVP necessary.

Discover Duke
Monday, October 16, 2017
700 PM
Boca Raton Renaissance
2000 NW 19th St
Boca Raton, FL 33431