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Travel activities, high school visits, and collegefairs were cited as less influential and weren’t used as often to discover and learn about new colleges. They are typically left out of collegefairs and obviously wouldn’t be included in high school visits or transfer fairs.
Explore as many colleges as possible. Start exploring your college options by using online search tools, going to collegefairs, chatting with college reps, and even asking friends who are already in college about their experiences. Look for a work-study job.
And then there are students who have strong initiative , a forward-thinking mindset , and an action-oriented ability to get things DONE. 6) Research and Visit Colleges: Explore Options : Research a range of colleges to find the best fit for your academic and personal interests. Attend collegefairs and information sessions.
Address your email to your regional counselor by name if you can, especially if you've met them during a college tour, school visit, or at a collegefair. This needs to be academic/passion oriented. Maybe you’ve finished an online or college course that aligns with your future goals.
If there has been quick action, policy change, punishment, and additional support for queer students, this is a good sign that the college is both responsive and committed to addressing and minimizing anti-queer behavior. Whether it’s in the college search process or at the college itself, everyone needs some extra support.
Think about what your big dream is—what or who you hope to become—and identify a few specific things about each college you’re applying to, asking yourself how each one of those is going to help you get there. Provide a “mini-thesis” for each school rather than a general list of qualities that the school meets for you.
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