Thursday, June 15, 2023

Merit Scholarships for SAT and ACT Scores

As more and more colleges go test optional, you might be wondering if you need to sit for the SAT or ACT at all. From guaranteed scholarships to merit scholarships, learn how better SAT and ACT scores can earn you big financial aid awards.

Test Optional? You Should Still Take the SAT/ACT.

Studying for SAT scholarships

Schools that are test optional do not require standardized test scores as part of a complete application. Instead, you have the chance to decide for yourself if your scores accurately reflect your abilities and potential to excel in college. Even if every school on your college list is test optional, it's still a smart idea to take—and prep for!—at least one standardized test.

For one, “optional” doesn’t mean that that colleges won't consider your test scores if you submit them. Without them, greater weight is given to other aspects of your application such as your transcript, essay, extracurricular and letters of recommendation. If you’re happy with your scores, go ahead and include with them your application.

Beyond getting in, your SAT & ACT test scores could qualify you for merit-based financial aid (often a separate application process). Higher test scores can lead to more scholarship dollars, which mean more options for you!

Better SAT & ACT Scores Can Earn You Scholarships

Higher scores can increase a student’s desirability in the eyes of financial aid officers and consequently increase the size of the aid package that student is offered. In fact, standardized test scores (along with GPA and rigor of coursework) may determine who will receive merit scholarships. Some schools even give out guaranteed scholarships to students whose scores meet a minimum threshold.

Sample List of Merit-based Scholarships 

School NameSAT Scores* 
( concordant )
ACT Scores**GPAAdmit RateMerit Award***
Albion College 1140 23 3.37 72% $18,800
College of Saint Benedict/Saint John's University 930 20 3.56 88% $16,240
Dickinson College 1350 31 NR 43% $17,042
Illinois Wesleyan University 1100 24 3.75 58% $15,636
Juniata College 1080 22 3.71 75% $18,672
Le Moyne College 1150 25 3.45 65% $18,839
Quinnipiac University 1100 25 3.40 76% $17,000
Rollins College 1200 27 3.32 61% $19,085
Santa Clara University 1380 31 3.67 48% $18,680
Saint Louis University 1070 23 3.89 65% $18,041
Texas Christian University 1230 28 NR 38% $17,824
University of North Carolina at Charlotte 1230 28 3.97 62% $17,107

*Critical Reading + Math ( Learn how to calculate new SAT scores .)
**ACT scores are self-reported Fall 2016 score data from schools featured
***Merit award data for qualifying individuals self-reported from schools and represents data during the 2016-17 school year

 

SAT & ACT Scores for Outside Scholarships

Even if you don’t need test scores for your college application, you will likely need them for most of the scholarship applications you fill out, including those for outside scholarships that are not affiliated with your college but sponsored by community organizations or foundations.

Kal Chany, author of our book Paying For College Without Going Broke explains, “Nothing can change a student’s fortune faster than a big increase on the SAT.” Why? While it takes four years to accumulate all those great grades on your high school transcripts, the typical test prep course takes just six weeks.

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

6 Steps to Start Your College Essay

By: CollegeData

Getting started on your college essay can be one of the hardest parts of applying to college. Our advice? Take it one step at a time.

Most counselors and students who have applied to college recommend getting started on your college essays early -- the summer prior to senior year, if possible. If you find yourself putting it off, or if you’re experiencing essay anxiety, take a deep breath and try this 6-step plan.

Step 1. Review the essay prompt(s)

Take 15 or 20 minutes to simply look at the essay prompts. The Common Application and Coalition Application release their prompts during the spring prior to senior year.

If you’re applying to colleges that require an essay but don’t accept the Common App or Coalition App, check the website of the colleges to which you are applying to see if their application and essay is available. Most colleges post their applications in August.

Don’t worry about choosing a topic yet. At this point, just think about what you want colleges to know about you, beyond your grades and test scores. As the Colorado College Admissions Department advises: “Take the time to think carefully about what you want us to know about you.”  

Step 2. Start brainstorming

On another day, look at the prompts again. Do any of them invoke personal experiences that demonstrate a unique aspect of your personality? Your academic passions? Your ability to learn and grow from your experiences? Or another quality you want colleges to remember? Write down everything that comes to mind.

Step 3. Test drive a few topics 

Some of the students profiled in CollegeData’s Road to College Student Stories have told us that when they connected with an essay topic they were truly passionate about, their essay practically wrote itself. How do you find that topic?

Spend at least a few afternoons or evenings writing about the experiences you brainstormed in Step 2. Write freely and don’t edit yourself at first -- just get your words and ideas on paper.

When you’re finished free writing, ask yourself:

  • Which topics were easy -- or even fun -- to write about?
  • Where did you have the most to say?
  • Which piece of writing seems to reveal the “real you” and your genuine voice?

Remember that your essay does not have to be about a harrowing hardship, tragic loss, or a jaw-dropping adventure. As the Wellesley Admissions Department advises: "An essay about some small, even insignificant-seeming thing can be more powerful than an essay about how you’ve saved the world or overcome tragedy.”

Step 4. Write a (terrible) first draft or two

Once you have selected your topic, you can start structuring your first draft. But don’t expect your first, or even third or fourth draft, to be perfect. Give yourself time to write multiple versions, and plan to walk away from your essay for at least a couple of days so you can come back to it with a fresh perspective.  

Keep in mind that you may be able to use parts of the early drafts of your essay -- writing that didn't make it into the final version  -- for supplemental essays or other parts of your application.

Warning: Be careful about being overly influenced by online essay examples.

While reading essays submitted by other students can be helpful, reading too many might put the voices of other students in your head. Your essay should be uniquely yours. As the Princeton Admissions Department advises: “This is your opportunity to display your best writing as well as your ability to convey ideas in your own voice.”

Step 5. Get feedback from a teacher, counselor, or other people you trust  

Some questions to ask the readers of your essay:

  • Does the essay ring true to them?
  • Does the language sound like you?
  • Did they find any parts of it unclear or difficult to understand?

Step 6. Write as many drafts as you need to 

Revise and get feedback until you feel confident that your essay says what you want it to say. Then have a teacher, counselor or another person you trust proofread your essay to ensure there are no grammatical or punctuation errors and that it is clear and easy to read.

With your essay finished, you can then work on the other parts of your applications. Good luck!

 

Friday, June 2, 2023

How to Earn High-Quality Volunteer Hours

By Camille Roney

Volunteer experience has become a basic requirement for many schools and almost every scholarship. But volunteering is so much more than something your student does in order to include it on an application. It's a chance to explore interests beyond academics, contribute to causes they're passionate about, and gain leadership skills.

Not all volunteer opportunities are weighted the same by admission committees. Let me walk you through how your student can earn quality volunteer hours, even while juggling a full course load.

What Admission Committees Look For

Generally speaking, review committees use volunteer experience as an indicator of how well-rounded a student is. When it comes to scholarships, they want to support students who have already served their community in a meaningful way. For undergraduate programs, schools tend to look for those who can contribute to the college’s culture at large and blossom into a stand-out member of the campus community.

In contrast, professional degrees such as medical school or masters and Ph.D. programs may explicitly require volunteer experience that directly ties to their industry.

Regardless, the number of hours volunteered is extremely important. A student with hundreds of volunteer hours and a leadership role in one organization speaks directly to their values and dedication to a specific cause much more than a student who volunteered for a single day at a community event.

A general guide is to aim for 10–15 volunteer hours per month for students during the school year, and as much as possible over the summer.

Quality Matters

As hinted above, what students are actually doing while volunteering also plays a significant role when reviewing student applications. Let’s consider a pre-health student seeking to volunteer at a hospital in order to gain experience in healthcare. The volunteer coordinator may place them at the hospital’s gift shop or at the front desk directing incoming calls. Although these roles certainly benefit the hospital, they don’t provide the student with many opportunities to interact directly with patients or other healthcare staff. In this case, the student may be better off volunteering at an assisted living center or hospice to gain higher quality experience.

How to Volunteer Without Sacrificing GPA

It gets even more complicated when you factor in that students are expected to be accomplishing this while maintaining peak performance in the classroom. For many students, competitive grades come at the cost of their lives outside of school, and the reverse is just as true.

Yet finding a balance between one’s most significant responsibilities (such as pursuing an education) and their personal life is an ongoing juggling act that doesn’t end with high school. In fact, many of us parents have recently picked up a book aimed at helping us find the elusive "work-life balance" we all seem to be chasing.

With the desire to set your student up for sustainable success, I welcome you to consider that all of us are already "failing" in one facet of life at the expense of excelling in another.

For instance, your student has likely had at least one productive study session in part because they chose not to spend that time doing something less important to them, such as perfecting their chocolate chip cookie recipe or learning how to ride a unicycle. They decided (consciously or not) what was important to them and acted accordingly.

So let me introduce you to a concept I like to call...

Value-Based Time Blocking

The idea is that their calendar should be a direct reflection of their personal values, not necessarily measured in time but by the quality of that time spent. Using what actually matters to them at their core as a compass allows them to discern what is or isn't a meaningful use of their time.

This practice welcomes students to reflect on how present they are at any given moment. Bringing ourselves back into the experience that is right in front of us increases both productivity and the pleasure we gain by participating.

The outcome may be that they spend less time studying because their actions are more productively focused, freeing up time either to take on more tasks or to reduce anxiety around the workload they have in front of them. For example, Value-Based Time Blocking encourages students to consider whether they really need to be studying for five hours after class, or if they could accomplish the same desired outcome in half the time by being more efficient.

And let me remind you that students don’t have to continuously participate in every activity for a set amount of time regardless of what else is going on in their lives. Many students accomplish all of their volunteering during summer breaks or on long weekends. Some can double-up to accomplish multiple goals at the same time, perhaps by volunteering under the supervision of their mentors.

In essence, students don’t necessarily have to do "everything" all at the same time. There's enough time in a semester to accomplish what really matters, and dedicated students use that time purposefully.

Additional Benefits of Volunteering

As if giving one’s most precious resource — time — wasn’t enough, students gain so much more than just something to add to their resumes. The experiences they have while volunteering makes for fantastic content for personal statements and scholarship applications, helping theirs stand out to the review committees.

Volunteering is also a common way for students to find incredible mentors. These professionals in their field can provide invaluable guidance and industry-specific insights, and they may also write letters of recommendation. The power of an incredible referral from a professional that speaks directly to your student’s unique strengths and skill set cannot be overstated.

Their Next Steps

Once they're ready to take on volunteering, the goal is to find or create opportunities that genuinely interest them, introduce them to new experiences, and can be accomplished without coming at the expense of what truly matters to them. If a volunteer commitment starts to impact performance in another important area of their life, it’s perfectly fine to walk away and try something else. Whether an opportunity is directly related to their academics or career goals is just a welcome bonus!

Balancing high academic performance with volunteering, along with anything else of great significance, doesn’t happen by accident. It is possible to "do all the things," as many competitive schools expect of their students, but this is only the outcome of intentional planning, deep personal investigation, dropping what no longer serves them, and pivoting as necessary.

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