Showing posts with label college application. Show all posts
Showing posts with label college application. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Summer Reading: Admission

Novelist Elizabeth Mosier served as acting director of admissions for Bryn Mawr's Class of 2006. Her recent book, Admission was reviewed by the Philadelphia Inquirer.

According to the review, the author "...makes the personal universal by connecting her character's dilemma to larger issues that concern us all: how we will educate our children and how we want to live..."

The review continues, "... The college selection system matters - to legacy and first-generation applicants alike - because it shapes preparation into the form that garners reward. The revelation of Admission, which Portia is compelled by her position to explain to her partner, Princeton faculty members, and exasperated parents, is that "the much-maligned system . . . was not about the applicant at all. It was about the institution. It was about delivering to the trustees, and to a lesser extent the faculty, a United Nations of scholars, an Olympiad of athletes, a conservatory of artists and musicians, a Great Society of strivers, and a treasury of riches so idiosyncratic and ill defined that the Office of Admission would not know how to go about looking for them and could not hope to find them if they suddenly stopped turning up of their own accord."

Contact The College Trail for more information on guiding your student through the college admissions process.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

The College Trail participates in WACAC college admissions roundtable

College admission standards were the topics of discussion during a roundtable The College Trail attended at the Western Association for College Admission Counseling (WACAC) at Chapman University. Shawn Abbott, the director of undergraduate admissions at Stanford University, and Greg MacCandless, associate director of college counseling at Sage Hill School, led a panel of experts through a case study to determine what college admissions officers look for in a candidate. They said that admissions officers look for reasons to admit a candidate, but it is up to the candidate to supply the necessary evidence - like test scores, grades, and extracurricular activities - in his or her application. One of the ways for a candidate to enforce this evidence is to tell a consistent story and allow his/her personality to shine throughout the entire college application. An intriguing outcome of the case study was that the strongest applicant, based on test scores with a 2250 combined SAT, lost out to other candidates with lower scores based on his overall application. For more information on The College Trail’s college admissions and counseling program, contact us today.
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