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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.
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College Admissions - Larger Picture

Elite Colleges Lag in Serving the Needy
Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription) - May 8, 2006
In 1940, James Bryant Conant, then president of Harvard University, laid out his vision of an egalitarian society, a classless culture based on educational opportunity, not chance of birth ...
Colleges Rethink Remedial Education
Newhouse News Service (NNS) - May 10, 2006
To understand why a high school diploma is no guarantee that a graduate has what it takes to thrive in college, a short history lesson is in order: High schools were never designed to funnel mass numbers of young Americans into colleges and universities. Only a select number of students are on a rigorous track that prepares them to succeed in college...
An Illegal Advantage
CBS News - May 10, 2006
Should it be cheaper for illegal immigrants to attend U.S. colleges than for U.S. citizens? Yes, according to lawmakers in California, Illinois, Kansas, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah, and Washington ...
Getting Into a Top College Gets Harder For Young Americans
Voice of America - May 10, 2006
Some of America's best universities have accepted an unusually low percentage of students for admission this fall. For example, the Wall Street Journal reported that Stanford University had a record low admission rate this year. The newspaper said the California school accepted less than eleven percent of the students who applied ...
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College Admissions Process/Strategies

Finding a college 101: Web sites can help
Tuscaloosa News (subscription), AL - May 9, 2006
Researching colleges can be so overwhelming these days that it can send you straight into the admissions office of that "safe school" Mom and Dad picked out for you in kindergarten. ...
Admissions process should be clear
Stanford Daily, CA - May 11, 2006
Why are we here? We don’t mean this in a metaphorical sense. Rather, why did the admissions office decide that we should be admitted to Stanford? Perhaps we'll never really know ...
Applying for college?
Peoria Journal Star, IL - May 7, 2006
How to visit colleges: Visits should be pre-arranged with a college or university's admissions office. The best days to plan a ...
Savor your last years in high school
USA Today - May 10, 2006
His advice to high school students: Enjoy yourself. Don't turn high school into a contest; don't sacrifice your real passions and ambitions for the sake of the college admissions process, because once you get into college, those passions and ambitions are what you are going to rely on to define your college experience. ...
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SAT/ACT

Longer SAT could mean lower scores
Seattle Times, United States - May 11, 2006
By Jay Mathews. College Board officials say they expect a decline of as much as five points, on average, in the math and verbal sections ...
Colleges Report Mystery Decline in SAT Scores
New York Times, United States - May 11, 2006
Just two months after the College Board disclosed that thousands of SAT exams taken in October were erroneously scored, some by more than 400 points, a new ...
Drop in scores for new SAT has educators puzzled
USA Today - May 10, 2006
By Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY. College admissions officials seeing large drops in average scores for the critical reading and ...
SAT scores drop; some see red flag
USA Today - May 10, 2006
By Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY. Some colleges are reporting double-digit drops in the average SAT scores of applicants this year ...
SAT, ACT tests still play a role
York Daily Record, PA - May 8, 2006
Even if some colleges are not requiring SAT and ACT test scores, some college officials, high school guidance counselors, parents and teens aren't discounting the tests's' importance...
Superstitions help students get through exams
Indianapolis Star, United States - May 7, 2006
Rafee Obaidi of Phoenix would not describe himself as a superstitious person. An aspiring doctor, he will tell you that he tries to think logically about most things. Still, when it came to taking the one test he considers "make or break," the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT), Obaidi, 22, says there was no question in his mind that he would use his lucky No. 2 pencil ...
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Space Survey

National Association for College Admission Counseling Survey
AScribe - May 5, 2006
Despite headlines about the growing competitiveness among the nation's colleges and universities, more than 210 colleges and universities still have space available for qualified students in their Fall 2006 freshman and/or transfer classes, according to the results of the National Association for College Admission Counseling's annual Space Availability Survey: Openings for Qualified Students ...
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Midwest News

Strickland proposes college tuition help
Youngstown Vindicator, OH - May 11, 2006
AUSTINTOWN A week after his strong victory in the Democratic gubernatorial primary, U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland hit the campaign trail touting key planks of his education reform proposal at Austintown Fitch High School. ...
Ag education expands in Indiana
Brownfield, MO - May 10, 2006
Purdue University has long been the sole source of agricultural education in the Hoosier state. Under a new partnership with two other education institutions, that is about to change. Agricultural education to help grow Indiana's agribusiness industry will soon be offered at college campuses across the state, thanks to an agreement among ...
Top students squeezed out of summer school
Indianapolis Star, United States - May 11, 2006
By Staci Hupp. More of Indiana's most talented students could be shut out of summer school as dwindling state money instead goes ...
Some educators warn against two-tiered college system
WISH, IN - May 10, 2006
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Some researchers worry that Indiana is developing a two-tier higher education system that has four-year schools ...
Another year, another tuition jump for Ohio State
MSNBC - May 8, 2006
A proposed 6 percent tuition increase at Ohio State University is likely to add to the college-cost sticker shock felt by Glenn Hunter's clients. ...
Ballot proposal will hurt Michigan
Escanaba Daily Press, MI - May 9, 2006
ESCANABA — If you know a young male who plans to attend a state college or university, circle Nov. 7 on your calendar. A ballot proposal to amend the Michigan Constitution will dramatically decrease his chances to be accepted at the school of his choice ...
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Literature - College Admissions

$50K FOR 200 POINTS: HOW RICH NY KIDS ACE THE SAT
New York Post, NY - May 8, 2006
THERE'S the tutor who was begged to come back after a client's father reassured him that his son's memory was much improved because he "had dried out in rehab." And the tutor who had to explain to a mother that writing a school paper for her son would be wrong. ...
College Admission Obsession Taking Over Teen Literature
Harvard Crimson, MA - May 7, 2006
Though the passage comparisons presented in the past week's editions of The Crimson illustrate a much more severe offense than mere setting-snatching, claims that the very premises of Viswanathan's and Megan McCafferty's ...
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Vocational Classes

Vocational classes make a comeback
Burbank Leader,  United States - May 3, 2006
Training courses like woodshop, auto repair and cooking are returning to Burbank schools as students become more interested in them...
Schools cutting wood shop in favor of biotech, business classes
KVOA.com, AZ - May 10, 2006
The whirring and grinding of table saws and sanders, along with the scent of cut pine, greet anyone who stumbles into Pete Boyko's wood shop class at Chaparral High School...
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Counselors

Cuts in college advice criticized
Chicago Daily Herald (subscription), IL - May 9, 2006
At John Hersey High School this year, a full-time college counselor handles the ranks of teens looking to get a degree after high school, helping them navigate the treacherous waters of financial aid forms and admissions requirements ...
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High School Ranking

What Makes a High School Great?
Newsweek May 8, 2006
If you want to understand what's happening in some of America's most innovative public high schools, think back to your own experiences in that petri dish of adolescent social stratification known as the cafeteria....
Class Competition
Newsweek, PA - May 8, 2006
How should we judge public high schools? Should it be on whether they prepare their best and brightest for college? Should it be on their emphasis on vocational training? What about their integration of alternative teaching methods and tracks?...
Students describe high school of dreams
Pittsburgh Post Gazette, PA - May 11, 2006
Later starting times and working water fountains are hardly the stuff of dreams. But combine those modest measures with small classes, online courses, challenging academic standards and opportunities for internships and work-study positions and the result would be a "school of dreams," ...
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Parents

Kids should be allowed to screw up, learn from it
Winston-Salem Journal, NC - May 6, 2006
... So I say this to the "helicopter parent" who wrote her son's college-admission essay, hovered obsessively when he enrolled and tried to protect him from ...
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Contents

Big Picture
Procees/Strat
SAT/ACT
Space Survey
Midwest
Literature
Vocational
Counselors
HS Rankings
Parents
Classified

Sponsors

philographica
Stonehill

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