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About HS CounselorWeek - weekly email
This weekly email searches main media outlets finding stories that may be of interest to high school counselors, college admission officers and related organizations, with links to the original stories. It is published by de facto, inc., publishers of other e-newsletters.
Question of the Week
Parents: There is a story today on parents calling the admission office, demanding to know: Why "we " weren't accepted. Obviously there are extremes, but how much is too much involvement with the process.
Tell us the "perfect parental scenerio"
Question of the Week Blog
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College Admissions - Larger Picture
College Applications on the Rise, and So Are Rejections ABC News - Apr 6, 2006 As applying to college becomes more competitive, high school students cast a wide net, sometimes applying to dozens of schools. As a result, many colleges and universities have issued a record number of rejections in the past year....
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US House approves changes to college aid UO Oregon Daily Emerald, OR - Apr 6, 2006 bill passed in the U.S. House on Thursday made several key changes to the federal government's higher-education policy aimed at making colleges and universities more affordable and accessible. A congressional committee has worked on the College Access and Opportunities Act for three years, and many of the more controversial provisions and amendments were removed or defeated before it finally passed 221-199 along largely partisan lines in the Republican-controlled House
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Gender Gap
Don't favor boys over girls USA Today - Apr 2, 2006 By Rachel Bolten. My mom is a proud graduate of Smith College. I've attended an all-girls school for the past seven years. When I ...
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Female enrollment growth worries colleges Salt Lake Tribune, United States - Apr 3, 2006 The nation's elite private schools are regularly doing what would once have been unthinkable: bypassing qualified women for less qualified male students. ...
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College Admissions Process/Strategies
High schools learning when to hide info Daily Pennsylvanian, PA - Apr 5, 2006 High school students are learning that in the college admissions process, less is more. An increasing number of high schools no longer provide class rank to colleges, a move that may give students an extra edge when applying to elite schools with shrinking acceptance rates...
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Some schools offer students a bigger boost than others Pittsburgh Post Gazette, PA - Apr 1, 2006 Fox Chapel Area High School guidance department chair Bob Alcorn considers his school to be on "the circuit."
Recruiters from more than 120 colleges and universities visited Fox Chapel last fall -- including Harvard, Princeton and Columbia -- hoping to land some of the school's more than 300 seniors ...
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Getting an education on college admissions Los Angeles Times, CA - Apr 1, 2006 Karin Klein makes a good point that teenagers should have a life while in high school instead of joining "The Rat Race to a Top College" (Current, March 26). ...
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New Web Sites Offer Forums for Pre-Frosh CU Columbia Spectator, NY - Apr 3, 2006 In the old days, receiving a thick envelope from Dream U. meant a call to a few close friends and dinner with parents. Not anymore. When thegame2388 found out she was accepted to Harvard, she wasn't shy about letting people know
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Anxiety/Choosing/Rejection
Nail-biting time for high school seniors 7Online.com, NY - Apr 4, 2006 WABC, April 4, 2006) - It's nail-biting time for high school seniors. They're waiting anxiously for those fat envelopes with college acceptances, and dreading the thin ones with bad news.
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stalking the big envelope Lexington Herald Leader, KY - Apr 4, 2006 you've got a high school senior in your household, you know what season it is. Not Final Four season. And spring break barely creates a ripple in your collective consciousness.
It's the season of the Big Envelopes announcing college admission and financial aid package
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Web journals give more solace than sense DetNews.com, MI - Apr 2, 2006 Fare on such Web sites as lunch-money.com ranges from college admissions committee serenades to rejection rants to good-luck meals. See full image. ...
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Counselors
Cheers for counselors The Journal News.com, NY - Apr 1, 2006 One of the educators who does not get enough recognition is the guidance counselor, who today is part substitute parent, part teacher, part career activist. We salute the profession. These days, students see their guidance counselors more regularly than the one or twice a year of yore, or more often if you had serious academic trouble or discipline problems.
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Midwest News
New manufacturing jobs will demand higher skills DetNews.com, MI - Apr 5, 2006 Execs at SAE say education will save Michigan jobs
Manufacturing in Michigan isn't dead -- yet -- but without fundamental changes in attitudes, education and expectations, it won't last long. That's the analysis from auto executives gathered at the annual Society of Automotive Engineers conference at Cobo Center. And their consensus couldn't be more accurate...
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Expand online college classes to reach more Mich. students DetNews.com, MI - Apr 4, 2006 Congress has opened the door for an explosion of Internet college classes, and Michigan schools should heed both the pending threats and the opportunities. Schools are no longer required to deliver at least half their courses on campus to qualify for federal student aid...
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Other states demanding more of student achievement DesMoinesRegister.com, IA - Apr 4, 2006 Michigan is leaving Iowa in the education dust. Legislators in Lansing just approved rigorous state high school graduation requirements, including passing Algebra II, starting with the graduating class of 2011...
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students are more than ready for college The Bay City Times, MI - Apr 5, 2006 Bored high school students: Wake Up! Some junior and seniors could skip over their last two years and earn a two-year college degree instead of dozing through high school, or worse yet, dropping out. The state of Michigan would help pay their way
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Regional campuses get tougher with admissions Gary Post Tribune, IN - Apr 6, 2006
Earning a college degree has become as much a part of the American dream as the house with a white picket fence and 2.3 kids. But getting admitted into college is getting harder and some academic dream chasers may be looking at alternate paths as universities in Indiana tighten admission requirements.
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Books
A 'How to Get Into College by Really, Really Trying' Novel New York Times, United States - Apr 5, 2006 CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Opal Mehta is the kind of girl who might get a half-million dollars for her first novel, completed during her freshman year at Harvard, followed by a movie deal with DreamWorks. After all, she started cello lessons at 5, studied four foreign languages beginning at 6, had near-perfect SAT scores and was president of three honors societies in high school...
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SAT / ACT
More universities are going SAT-optional USA Today - Apr 4, 2006 selective liberal arts colleges that have chosen to make the SAT or ACT optional for students who seek admission; several others, including College of the Holy ...
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On some campuses, SAT test is DOA Salem Statesman Journal, OR - Apr 2, 2006 ... High-stakes standardized tests such as the SAT have assumed a central role in the admissions process disproportionate to their value. This test falls far short of predicting academic or career potential or important aptitudes, such as curiosity, motivation, persistence, leadership, creativity, civic engagement and social conscience...
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College Board Apologizes For Low SAT Scores Caroll News, OH - Apr 3, 2006 The College Board has apologized to high school students and college admissions offices after recognizing that many more students received lower SAT scores than was first estimated. The board said March 22 that 27,000 of the 495,000 tests taken in October were not completely rescanned ...
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Private Counselors
Educational consultant makes the grade Toronto Sun, Canada - Apr 5, 2006 People will pay for expertise. If you're a specialist in a certain area, consider hanging it out as your small business shingle. "I had long thought about becoming an educational consultant specializing in university admissions," says entrepreneur Norman S. Smith, Ed.D. ...
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Paying for Help to Get Into Ivies CU Columbia Spectator, NY - Apr 3, 2006 The headquarters of the consulting company IvyWise, located in a tower next door to Carnegie Hall, seems at first as inaccessible as the colleges to which it promises admission. But upon entering the big, open office, one is put immediately at ease: it feels like a neatnik's dorm room, decorated with cushy rugs, shelves of college guides, and color-coordinated accessories ...
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Parents
Wrong Answer Washington Post, United States - Mar 31, 2006 The admission office phones rang off the hook after the decisions were posted online. Between 8:30 a.m. and noon on the morning of April 5, 2005, I answered 18 decision-related phone calls -- 16 from parents, one from a guidance counselor and only one from an actual applicant. The parents were upset, wanting to know why "we" had been wait-listed ...
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Finacial Aid - Scholarships
Ivies fight bidding war with new aid policies Daily Pennsylvanian, PA - Apr 5, 2006 By tali yahalom. As more Ivy League schools expand their financial-aid policies, officials say that elite schools are finding themselves in a bidding war. ...
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Fishing For College Aid? Cast A Wide Net Hartford Courant, United States - Apr 5, 2006 By EILEEN ALT POWELL, Associated Press. NEW YORK -- It's panic time in many American homes as parents struggle to evaluate the financial ...
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Study up on college scholarships Kansas City Star, MO - Apr 3, 2006 A few tips from Stephen H. Joyce, director of student aid at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine: Make sure you know the total ...
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Get More Financial Aid Smartmoney.com - Apr 5, 2006 IF YOU'VE GOT A high school senior in your home, chances are you've been paying extra special attention to your mail box. Fat envelopes good, skinny ones bad. That's right, it's college acceptance time. And while your biggest concern right now may simply be knowing that your kid has been accepted somewhere, once you've got a few yeses to choose from, your anxiety will likely to turn to those financial aid offers. ...
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Question Week
Big Picture
Gender Gap
Procees/Strat
Choose/Reject
Counselors
Midwest
Books
SAT/ACT
Parents
Financial Aid
Classified
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