College Application Process
Why should I go to college?
Researching Colleges
- Big Future
- College Data
- YOUR COLLEGE COUNSELOR!
- DO be honest! It is the quickest and most stress free to way to get the results you want!
- DON'T follow your friends! This is most surely the slowest and most stressful way to NOT get the results you want!
- DO listen to your parents and family, but KNOW that the decision will always, ultimately, be yours to make.
- DON'T undersell yourself in the application process. Stand up and SHINE!
- DO know that your counselors have your best interests in mind. If you are open, we will support you and fight for you when necessary.
- DON'T be unrealistic! Numbers do not lie.
- DO know who you are as an academic and social person and know your limitations.
- DO identify what is MOST important to you and keep this mind when doing your college search.
Drafting Personal Statements & Additional Essays
- A picture. Your personal essay should produce a picture of you as a person, a student, a potential scholarship winner, and (looking into the future) a former scholarship recipient.
- An invitation. The reader must be invited to get to know you, personally. Bridge the assumed distance of strangers. Make your reader feel welcome.
- An indication of your priorities and judgment. What you choose to say in your statement tells the committee what your priorities are. What you say, and how you say it, is crucial.
- A story, or more precisely, your story. Everyone has a story to tell, but we are not all natural storytellers. If you are like most people, your life lacks inherent drama. This is when serious self-reflection, conversation with friends, family, and mentors, and permission to be creative come in handy.
- An academic paper with you as the subject. The papers you write for class are typically designed to interpret data, reflect research, analyze events or readings--all at some distance. We are taught to eliminate the "I" from our academic writing. In a personal statement your goal is to close the distance between you and the reader. You must engage on a different, more personal level than you have been trained.
- An essay that reads like a resume of accomplishments and goals tells the reader nothing that they could not glean from the rest of the application. It reveals little about the candidate, and is a wasted opportunity.
- A journal entry. While you may well draw on experiences or observations captured in your personal journal, your essay should not read like a diary. Share what is relevant, using these experiences to give a helpful context for your story. And include only what you are comfortable sharing--be prepared to discuss at an interview what you include.
- Most importantly, a personal statement is authentic. Don't make the mistake of trying to guess what the committee is looking for, and don't write what you think they want to hear. They want to know you.
Applying to Colleges
- You may apply to colleges either directly through an individual school's website, or through a 3rd party application like the Common App. Please see the website of the school you are applying to for specific instructions.
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Once you have applied, please update your Naviance account, and request your transcript be sent. If you do not do this, then your application is not complete!
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researching colleges
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comparing your statistics to colleges' requirements/scattergrams
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requesting letters of recommendation from college counselors and teachers
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keeping counselors posted on where you are applying
Please ensure that your Naviance student account is up to date and ready to go.
The Common Application or the "Common App" is ONE undergraduate college admission application that applicants may use to apply to any of 900+ member colleges and universities in the U.S. and internationally. Schools that accept the Common App include over 100 public universities, eleven HBCUs, and over 250 institutions that do not require an application fee.
The Common App allows you to send all of the same information to several schools. This includes a personal statement/essay and an academic resume. Some schools may require additional essays. Please visit this LINK to learn more.
Community Colleges
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Located in North West DC on the Red Line (Van Ness Station)
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Offers Associate Degrees, Certificate Programs, and Workforce Development Programs (FREE for DC Residents!)
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Located in Maryland via the Red Line (Shady Grove Station)
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Offers Associate Degrees, Certificate Programs, Professional Licensure, and Workforce Development Programs
Prince George's Community College
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Located off Interstate 495
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Offers Associate Degrees, Career Programs, Transfer Programs and Workforce Development Programs
College Admissions Testing (SAT, ACT, and SAT Subject Tests)
College Application/SAT Fee Waivers