| MidWest Edition | Archive | Sponsoring | Last Week's HS CouselorWeek |      March 9, 2006
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.
Back to top of newsletter

College Admissions - Larger Picture

Early visits lure poor into college
Christian Science Monitor, MA - Mar 6, 2006
By Kate Moser | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor. CLINTON, NY Growing up in a working-class Boston neighborhood, Leide ...
International Curriculum in Pa. Spotlight
Guardian Unlimited, UK - Mar 6, 2006
By JENNIFER C. YATES. PITTSBURGH (AP) - School board members in a Minnesota district call it anti-American and anti-Christian. In New Jersey, members of one school board argue it's a waste of money. Now, a suburban Pittsburgh school district is abolishing it over questions of politics and cost. ...
College admissions decisions get harder
Salt Lake Tribune, United States - Mar 5, 2006
Application files are piled high this month in colleges across the country. Admissions officers are poring over essays and recommendation letters, scouring transcripts and standardized test scores. But something is missing from many applications: a class ranking, once a major component in admissions decisions...
Relax, It's Only College
Washington Post, United States - Mar 7, 2006
.It is college anxiety season. High school juniors are facing SAT or ACT tests. High school seniors are checking their mailboxes. Family peace and mental health are in jeopardy, but a new book has come to the rescue, "Getting In Without Freaking Out" by Arlene Matthews...
Back to top of newsletter

SAT Scoring Errors

Colleges scramble amid SAT glitch
Boston Globe, United States - Mar 9, 2006
By Marcella Bombardieri and Tracy Jan, Globe Staff | March 9, 2006. College admissions officers in Massachusetts and elsewhere yesterday ...
Officials Say Scoring Errors for SAT Were Understated
New York Times, United States - Mar 9, 2006
A day after the College Board notified colleges that it had misreported the scores of 4,000 students who took the SAT exam in October, an official of the ...
Colleges scramble to reconsider applications after SAT scoring ...
Boston Globe, United States - Mar 8, 2006
By Justin Pope, AP Education Writer | March 8, 2006. College admissions offices scrambled Wednesday to reconsider applications after ...
College Board Says 4,000 SAT Scores Wrong
Washington Post, United States - Mar 6, 2006
By JUSTIN POPE. -- About 4,000 students who took the main SAT college entrance exam last October received incorrectly low scores ...
Technical Problems Cause Errors in SAT Test Scores
Sarasota Herald-Tribune, FL - Mar 7, 2006
By KAREN W. ARENSON. About 4,000 students who took the SAT last October received test scores that were lower than they should have ...
Back to top of newsletter

SAT's & ACT's

Outsmarting the SATs
Tracy Press, CA - Mar 7, 2006
It was 9 p.m. Thursday, and the temperature in the classroom at West High School was about 80 degrees. Inside, 14 clammy, tired students were involved in a heated discussion about the best way to "find absolute value" and "solve for x" and do other things that make heads spin....
Kaplan Makes Personalized Online SAT Practice Tool Available to ...
PR Newswire (press release), NY - Mar 6, 2006
... Own SAT Quiz Program Including a Databank of 1,000 SAT Questions NEW YORK, March 6 /PRNewswire/ -- In the high-stakes world of college admissions, it seems ...
Back to top of newsletter

College Admissions Process/Strategies

IN OR OUT?
Buffalo News,  United States - Mar 6, 2006
A stack of college applications sits on her desk, arranged neatly into files of students awaiting word on whether they'll be accepted to the University at Buffalo. Holding their future at UB in her hands is Barbara Rooney, who's perusing a high school transcript she marked with red ink...
College applications:
San Jose Mercury News,  USA - Mar 7, 2006
For seniors, the college application process is nearly over. It can be tenuous, speculative and confusing. But it doesn't have to be. So as we're waiting for our acceptance or rejection letters to start arriving and because we're fresh from the . ...
College Admissions Advice: Start Early
Springdale Morning News, AR - Mar 6, 2006
Bethany Haefner admits feeling overwhelmed when applying for college. Haefner, a Bentonville High School senior, started a year and a half ago looking at where she would spend the four years after high school ...
College Admissions, Aid Topics For Online Chat
North Country Gazette, NY - Mar 6, 2006
ALBANY--Students and parents can learn about college admissions and financial aid at a free, interactive online chat event on Tuesday, March 21 at 7 p.m. The event is hosted by Mapping Your Future, a public service Web site sponsored by the New York State Higher Education Services Corp. (HESC)...
Back to top of newsletter

MySpace.com etc.

What you say online could haunt you
USA Today - Mar 8, 2006
College student Michael Guinn thought the photos he posted of himself dressed in drag would be seen only by friends. But he made a mistake.
Back to top of newsletter

Private Counselors

Admissions Consultancies Continue to Grow
AACRAO Transcript, DC - Mar 4, 2006
Parents are increasingly hiring private consultants to help their children get into college, reports The Associated Press. Mark Sklarow, executive director of the Independent Educational Consultants Association, said the number of consultants in his organization has more than tripled in the past ten years, and the growth is expected to continue...
Parents spend big bucks for consultants on college admissions
Albuquerque Tribune, NM - Mar 8, 2006
WASHINGTON - As high school seniors across the country wait anxiously for the responses to their college applications, some can take comfort in knowing they ...
Back to top of newsletter

College Visits

Judy McNeeley: Campus visits are cultural anthropology
Santa Cruz Sentinel, CA - Mar 5, 2006
If Aesop were alive today, he just might divide high-school students into two groups: grasshoppers and ants. Roughly translated: Those who party and those who work hard. This column, by an independent adviser to local high-school students, is for the ants. Studious, serious-minded, college-bound ants ... and their families. ...
Making the Most of Spring Break By Visiting College Campuses
PR Newswire (press release), NY - Mar 6, 2006
Spring break is right around the corner and that means an opportune time for college-bound high school seniors to visit college campuses. In doing so, students and families will get an up-close look at potential schools of choice, helping them to experience college before actually making the final decision...
Back to top of newsletter

College Marketing Technology

The Electronic Lowdown on Colleges
New York Times, United States - Mar 8, 2006
LET me say from the outset that my college-bound daughter has never won an Olympic medal for speed skating. The author describes the arcana of Ivy League admission.
Back to top of newsletter

Class Ranking

Officials Dismiss Ranking Concerns
Harvard Crimson, MA - Mar 7, 2006
With high schools steadily abandoning class rankings frustrating many college admissions officers Harvard admissions officials said they are unfazed by the decrease in quantitative information that high schools provide about students...
Colleges Say Excluding Class Rank Slows Admissions Process
KCCI.com, IA - Mar 7, 2006
Iowa colleges and universities are busy processing student applications for admission. But the process is becoming a bit more complicated for admission counselors. More high schools are opting to exclude a student's class rank from his or her transcript...
How Important Are High School Rankings?
13WHAM-TV, NY - Mar 7, 2006
Class rankings allow students to know where they stand among their peers. However, some high schools are no longer ranking students, including at least one Rochester-area school...
Back to top of newsletter

College Cost Issues

Cost Remains a Key Obstacle to College Access
Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription) - Mar 6, 2006
Which obstacle blocks students more from making a successful transition from school to college: preparation or financial need? That is an underlying question that runs through many debates about how high school students move on to higher education or don't move on. The Chronicle asked two scholars to give their views ...
Shrinking that US college bill
Jamaica Observer, Jamaica - Mar 4, 2006
After the euphoria of college acceptances wears off, families must grapple with the insanity of college economics. Back in 1988, when many of this current crop of high school seniors were smearing their highchairs with strained carrots, nobody would have dreamed that it could cost $175,000 or more just to send one kid to a fancy university ...
Back to top of newsletter

Northeast News

Army of recruiters invades city highs
New York Daily News, NY - Mar 5, 2006
The U.S. military is most successful recruiting city students from super-sized high schools with mediocre graduation rates and tight security, a Daily News analysis has found. ...
Survey Shows Most Maine Students Expect To Go To College
WLBZ-TV, ME - Mar 8, 2006
Four out of five students in Maine expect to go to college, and most are optimistic about their futures...
Private eyes on top low-income students
Lowell Sun, MA - Mar 7, 2006
By HILLARY CHABOT, Sun Staff. LOWELL -- Many students at Northern Essex Community College don't start at the two-year school thinking ...
Rutgers revamp spares Douglass
Asbury Park Press, NJ - Mar 7, 2006
BY RICK MALWITZ. NEW BRUNSWICK The branch of Rutgers University now known as Douglass College will continue, with a longer name ...
Campus reactions to proposal vary
New Brunswick Home News Tribune, NJ - Mar 7, 2006
RUTGERS The university president's blessing to mix the school's colleges met with mixed reactions on campus yesterday. "I think ...
Selective admission makes Charter too elite, critics say
The News Journal, DE - Mar 3, 2006
The Charter School of Wilmington sends 98 percent of its graduates to college and boasts the state's strongest SAT scores. Most of its students take college-level math. It is the flagship of the Delaware public education system. It is also a center of controversy about how charter schools can restrict admissions and whether gifted students should learn separately from their peers...
Back to top of newsletter

Counselors High School Programs

Local guidance counselors see self-injury cases
Delphos Herald, OH - Mar 6, 2006
by MIKE FORD. Many people of any age incorporate a variety of methods to ease the pressure of life. Of all age groups, teens can ...
Program offers life lessons
Bradenton Herald,  United States - Mar 4, 2006
The sixth-grader sits in a circle with a group of his friends at Perkins Middle School and opens his heart. He speaks of the pain he feels because his father has not been part of his life. ...
Back to top of newsletter

Classified Ads

HELP WANTED

Campus Bound is a dynamic, growing independent college and financial aid consulting company. The company is seeking part-time counselors to work closely with students as they progress through the college search and application process more details
 
 

Contents

Big Picture
SAT Error
SAT/ACT
Process/Strat
MySpace
Pvt Counsel
Visits
Mkt/Tech
Class Ranking
Costs
Northeast
Consul Programs
Classified

Sponsors

campusbound
philographica
Stonehill

To view pages in PDF format, you need Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Click the icon for a free copy of Adobe Acrobat Reader:
Get Adobe Acrobat Reader

(Acrobat and the Acrobat logo are trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated)

About This E-Mail
You received this newsletter because you registered your name and email address requesting HSCounselorWeek, or because you are a member of a cooperating organization. To unsubscribe, change delivery options or your e-mail address, see http://www.HSCounselorWeek.com.  

Suggestions and feedback are welcome at suggestions@hscounselorweek.com.

How to Advertise
For information on advertising in e-mail newsletters or other advertising opportunities with HS CounselorWeek, contact sales@hscounselorweek.com or visit our sponsoring page.

Disclaimer
Send all correspondences to de facto, inc. PO Box 602 Bedford MA 01730 . Neither the US Government nor any agency, nor de facto, inc, nor any of the contractors, subcontractors, advertisers, or employees makes any warranty, expressed or implied including any warranty of completeness, or merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose, nor assumes any legal liability or responsibility for any party's use or the result of such contents of the newsletter. In no event will de facto's liability, if any, exceed the value of the weekly charge for the information provided giving rise to such liability.

Copyright 2005 - 2006 de facto, inc.