Rising Seniors, Your Time Is Now.

As high school seniors across the country hoist their caps in the air, the reality is setting in for many families with rising high school seniors that their time is quickly approaching! While this is such an exciting time in the lives of these teenagers, it is inevitably an overwhelming time as you try to navigate the college admission landscape ahead. As a father of two of these teenagers and an independent educational consultant, I wanted to offer three things that rising seniors can prioritize this summer to make progress on their journey and (hopefully) have a bit of fun and self-discovery along the way.

Seniors, this summer is your chance to get ahead of the game so that you can lighten your burden on the always-hectic senior year fall semester. Consider these three milestones for your summer:

  1. Sharpen your college list to a list where you will uniquely thrive! Through online and in-person research, now is the time to boldly identify the schools that do and do not make your cut. This exercise should take into consideration academic qualifications, cost, campus environment, location, size, areas of study, and just general vibe! Ideally, by the end of summer you should have somewhere between 6-12 schools that you are distinctively excited to apply to and possibly attend. 

  2. Define YOUR application voice! Take some time to celebrate and document your differentiating strengths and talents. What are you doing when time flies? What role do you play among your friend group? What comes easy to you? All of these answers are unique to you and will set the foundation for the tone you want to convey to admission officers who read your application.

  3. Start some rough (and I mean rough!) drafts of your essays. These will be wonderfully messy. These will be perfectly imperfect. But, you will have a start! A great place to start is the Common App website (commonapp.org) where you can sign up for a practice account until the new form is available on August 1st. There you will see several essay prompts that are great places to start brainstorming and free-writing to get ideas on paper. 

Map these out in the way that works best for you and your organizational style. Just getting organized for this process is half of the battle and a great place for personal growth.

Previous
Previous

Rising Juniors, It’ll Be Here Sooner Than You Think (gulp).