Applying to College

Passport To Life · SlidesMania

Applying to College: Once you've decided on several target schools, it's time to put together the all-important college application!  Please check the website of the school you are interested in about their admissions and application process, each school is a little different, Prepare yourself for success with guidance from experts on topics such as admissions essays, letters of recommendation, and alumni interviews by clicking on the link from the Khan Academy.

Explore your options: Many schools host events for prospective students, please check out the Post-High School Connections page on Evergreenps.org for upcoming events and school admissions contact information. 

Things you may need:

Common Application:

A membership association of over 900 Colleges that provides a “common, standardized first-year application form for use at any member institution”.

The Common Application is a not-for-profit membership organization that, since its founding over 30 years ago, has been committed to providing reliable services that promote equity, access, and integrity in the College application process. We serve students, member institutions, and secondary schools by providing applications – online and in print – that students and school officials may submit to any of over 750 college members. Membership is open to Colleges and universities that promote access by evaluating students using a holistic selection process.

List of Colleges that accept the Common App

Using the College Planning and Application Tool in Xello:

In Xello, using the College Planning tool, students research the schools they’re interested in, build a plan, and then track the action items, deadlines and application progress for each institution using the College Applications tracker. Log on to you Xello to begin, see the following link for tips and how to's

Xello College Planning Guide 

College Advice: How I Read An Application

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At this time of year, college admissions officers like me are bleary-eyed from weeks of reading applications. Many of us are now in committee sessions, determining which applicants will receive offers of admission.  At the very few super-selective, single-digit-percentage-acceptance places, the process is Darwinian.

Admissions officers at the vast majority of places, however, those of us that accept more than half of our applicants, are spending more time trying to strengthen relationships with students who have been or will be admitted, in order to get them to accept our offers and enroll.  These efforts to yield the best possible class are the main business of most offices in March, and they are the absolute business of all offices in April, before deposits are due May 1.

As I move into the stretch run of my second season on the university admissions side (after decades on the secondary school counseling side), I want to share how I read an application.  This protocol is my own; others read differently.  I offer my thoughts particularly for Juniors who will be preparing to apply over the next six to nine months—though they may also be of value to Seniors who are presently waiting to learn their fates.

I always start with the School Profile and Transcript:

I read the Recommendations next:

Finally, if I like what I’ve seen on the Profile and Transcript, and what I’ve read in the Recommendations, I spend time on the Application itself:

A final note: if you’d like to see a two-minute video of my advice to Juniors and their parents at a wonderful independent school in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, check this YouTube link:

Conducting a Thoughtful Search: https://youtu.be/-ytJjbuQcvo

For more 

After three decades in secondary education in the United States, Caribbean and Europe, Chris Teare is now Senior Associate Director of Admissions at Drew University in Madison, NJ.