College Admissions 101: What your student needs to know

It’s not your parents’ college search. Way back in the days of yore, high school students pored over college guidebooks the size of doorstops, actually used the Post Office to communicate with admission offices, and painstakingly filled in their applications using a typewriter.

Those guidebooks can still be a big help, but students today have many more ways to research and apply to colleges. The Internet has made gathering information easy. But it can be hard to tell whether all that information is reliable. And online applications can make envelopes and stamps seem positively archaic. But electronic applications can be just as tricky as their paper counterparts. What’s a high-tech student to do?

For some helpful hints on using the latest technology in your college search, read on!

Lesson One: Just because it’s on the Internet doesn’t make it true. Okay, so that seems really basic for a tech-savvy person like yourself. But it’s important to keep in mind for everyone that ever received an email about a nonexistent virus. (Quick! Forward this to 200 of your closest friends or the world will end!)

This lesson holds true for college-search sites, too. You probably won’t find listings for nonexistent colleges. But you could end up with out-of-date application deadlines or lists of majors. Also, most college search sites include only the colleges that paid the site to list them. That’s why you’ll get different college lists from different sites (even if you plug in the same preferences).

“Use comparative Web sites only for a general feel and opinions,” advises a representative from the University of Southern California. “Even the best can be only as good as the information they’re given.”

In other words, use the college-search sites as a starting point. Don’t depend on just one site—get lists from several of them. Then go to the Web sites of individual colleges to get the real scoop.

Lesson Two: Don’t judge a college by its Web site. You can learn a lot about a college from its Web site. Many colleges have extensive sites that include faculty and student Web pages, detailed information about majors and programs, and even virtual campus tours.

Other colleges have more basic Web sites: They may have good information, but they’re definitely not high on the “wow!” meter.

Don’t be fooled by the quality (or lack of quality) of a college Web site. A poor Web site tells you only that the college has not yet invested a lot in its Web presence. It says next to nothing about the quality of the college itself.

“The college with the best Web site—just like the one with the best publication—is not always the best college for a particular student,” says a representative at Alfred University (NY).

The one exception to this principle may be students interested in a high-tech major. A well-done Web site may indicate a greater commitment to keeping up with the latest technology. That may not matter much to a history major, but a potential Web designer or software programmer may need a college on the cutting edge.

Lesson Three: Go undercover. Of course, you need to know a college’s majors, activities, and application requirements. But don’t stop with the admission office’s home page.

“First, look for the student newspaper online, and second, look for links to students’ Web pages,” says a director of admission at an Oregon institution. “You can find good ‘unofficial’ or ‘undercover’ information on the institution.” Plus, you can e-mail students and ask them questions about the school.

Undercover information can give you a more in-depth view of the college. It can tell you what the hot issues on campus are (fraternities? politics? bad cafeteria food?) and what students are interested in.

Other pages that can give you good information:

Faculty home pages—some post detailed syllabuses of their classes.
Department home pages—get information about majors from the people who teach them.
Student organizations—check out the schedule for clubs and teams or see what resolutions were passed by the Student Senate.
Alumni association pages—what are alumni of the college doing now? What is the college doing for its alumni?

Lesson Four: An application is an application. Most colleges accept both paper and electronic applications. Many colleges prefer electronic applications because they make it easier to track student data. However, the type of application submitted won’t make a difference in the admission decision.

Tech-savvy students may find applying electronically to be easier and more efficient. But there are some pitfalls to electronic applications.

Some paper applications can be difficult to read due to poor handwriting and some online applications are hard to read because students slip into their poor e-mail writing patterns.

It’s easy to click a button and send an application to a college. But make sure that you take an online application just as seriously as a paper one.

Lesson Five: Sometimes old ways are best. One of the best resources in the college search and application process is still your guidance or college counselor. He or she has firsthand information on colleges, has helped hundreds of students through the process, and can get to know you face to face. Even the most technologically advanced Web site can’t top that!

Chyten’s Spring and Summer reading list, for parents of college-bound students

Parent who want to keep up with college admissions, and what they can do to guide themselves and their children through the college admissions process, might find any one of the following books helpful:

College Unranked: Ending the College Admissions Frenzy by Lloyd Thacker

In this book, the presidents and admission officers of leading colleges and universities – like Dartmouth, Vanderbilt, Harvard – remind readers that college choice and admission are a matter of fit, not of winning a prize, and that many colleges are “good” in different ways.

The Gatekeepers: Inside the Admissions Process of a Premier College by Jacques Steinberg

Among the book’s surprises are that supplementary material, no matter how impressive, carries no weight in deciding who gets in — while honesty about a mistake, in one instance drug-related, can influence an admissions officer to admit.

Harvard Schmarvard: Getting Beyond the Ivy League to the College That is Best for You by Jay Mathews

Written by, yes, a Harvard grad, Harvard Schmarvard rebuts the perception that image is everything when it comes to college and emphasizes this simple fact: What you will be measured by in life is your talent and energy, not your college’s name.

Less Stress, More Success: A New Approach to Guiding Your Teen Through College Admission and Beyond by Marilee Jones and Kenneth Ginsburg

This first-of-its-kind book delivers strategies for surviving the admissions process while strengthening parent-child relationships, managing the stress of applying to college, and building resilience to meet challenges today and in the future.

Letting Go: A Parents’ Guide to Understanding the College Years by Karen Levin Coburn and Madge Lawrence Treeger

Based on real-life experience and recommended by colleges and universities around the country, this indispensable book has been updated and revised, offering even more compassionate, practical, and up-to-the-minute information.

Looking Beyond the Ivy League: Finding the College That’s Right for You by Loren Pope

Looking Beyond the Ivy League offers a step-by-step guide to selecting the right institution, a checklist of specific questions to ask when visiting a college, the secrets to creating good applications and good applicants, and much more.

Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools You Should Know About Even If You’re Not a Straight-A Student by Loren Pope

The landmark college guide that introduces forty of the best colleges you’ve never heard of—now completely revised and updated!

The Overachievers: The Secret Lives of Driven Kids by Alexandra Robbins

A compelling mix of fast-paced storytelling and engrossing investigative journalism, The Overachievers aims both to calm the admissions frenzy and to expose its escalating dangers.

The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton by Jerome Karabel

“Millions of Americans think of the Ivy League as a training ground for the best and brightest. But for most of the twentieth century Harvard, Yale, and Princeton were more interested in sustaining the aristocracy than in shaping the nation’s intellectual elite. An utterly absorbing account of politics and privilege on America’s most revered campuses.” — Kevin Boyle, National Book Award-winning author of Arc of Justice

The Shape of the River by William G. Bowen

The Shape of the River brings a wealth of empirical evidence to bear on how race-sensitive admissions policies actually work and clearly defines the effects they have had on over 45,000 students of different races. Its conclusions mark a turning point in national discussions of affirmative action.

The College Admissions Mystique by Bill Mayher

In this fresh and plainspoken book, admissions professional Bill Mayher demystifies the college application process, guiding students and parents through this too often anxiety-filled ritual. He covers practical issues, including discovering colleges, narrowing down the search, finding financial aid, and using college counselors to the best advantage.

Creating a Class: College Admissions and the Education of Elites by Mitchell L. Stevens

With novelistic flair, sensitivity to history, and a keen eye for telling detail, Stevens explains how elite colleges and universities have assumed their central role in the production of the nation’s most privileged classes. Creating a Class makes clear that, for better or worse, these schools now define the standards of youthful accomplishment in American culture more generally.

The Financial Aid Handbook by Carol Stack and Ruth Vedvik

The Financial Aid Handbook is the definitive, one-stop guide to the college selection and payment process, covering everything from basic timelines and tuition costs to predicting your scholarship award from colleges and taking ownership of student debt after graduation.

Chyten announces summer ACT and SAT ‘Boot Camp’ dates for 2013

Chyten is offering special, one-week Summer Boot Camps to prepare students for the SAT and ACT. Twenty-five hours of instruction, a full-length practice test and diagnostic report, and all books and materials are included in this special summer offering.

Boot Camps are perfect for busy students and athletes, delivering all of Chyten’s key strategies in a short, intense timeframe, and offering a highly effective method for students to prepare for their fall exams:

CLASS TYPE DATES TIME
SAT CLASS July 15 – 19 9:00 – 2:00
SAT CLASS July 22 – 26 9:00 – 2:00
SAT CLASS July 29 – August 2 9:00 – 2:00
SAT CLASS August 5 – 9 9:00 – 2:00
SAT CLASS August 12 – 16 9:00 – 2:00

A complete listing of Chyten’s upcoming SAT and ACT classes is located here! Call 505-2495 to register.

 

Chyten launches 4th and 5th grade end-of-grade prep

What is ENRICH?

Students will participate in enrichment activities across all spectrums of the upper elementary school curriculum. In addition to providing extension activities in Math, Reading, Spanish, Science and Social Studies, we will spend part of each session focusing on how to produce high standardized test scores, whether your student is taking the NC EOG, the ERB, or the Iowa tests in May.

Educating and Nurturing to Reach Intellectual and Creative Heights, a program for gifted and advanced students in grades 4-5

Class Models (with sample topics):

Reading Strategies • Visualization • Making Connections • Questioning • Predicting • Gallery Walk • Symbolism • Literary Terms
Americana • Grammar Games • Sentence Structure • Parts of Speech • Writer’s Workshop • Graphic Novellas • Poetry
Creative Problem Solving • Social Issues

ENRICH students will be able to:

  • Organize ideas and information
  • Comprehend and enjoy various types of reading material
  • Develop math sense through hands-on exploration of concepts
  • Interpret visual, verbal, auditory, and other types of media
  • Physically engage in learning activities
  • Communicate effectively in a variety of situations on a wide range of topics
  • Practice both inductive and deductive reasoning to investigate relationships between details and generalizations
  • Generate questions for limitless inquiry
  • Examine and analyze the mechanics and usage of the English language
  • Synthesize knowledge and inquiry to solve problems and answer questions
  • Draft, edit and publish original works of fiction and non-fiction writing
  • Write, direct, perform adaptations of written, oral, musical, and visual texts
  • Work cooperatively with others on diverse projects

Cost of Program: $50 for hour and a half class

Class will meet on Tuesdays from 4:00-5:30, beginning February 26!

What is RANDD?

RANDD is a reading and study skills program for students in middle school. It provides all the resources that students need to prepare them for success at the high school level and beyond.

 

Chyten’s Reading and Development program (RANDD) significantly improves student confidence and performance. Based on 20 years of experience and recent learning research, this revolutionary study skills program is extremely successful and is in high demand. Now, you can find it in Asheville.

Specifically developed for elementary and middle school students, RANDD is the most comprehensive Reading and Study Skills program ever created. This 14-session tutorial program is everything your child will ever need for a lifetime of learning.

Review-Integrated Notetaking

Chyten’s RANDD Program teaches students a method of classroom note-taking that transforms student notes into a handy review page. No more wasting time rewriting notes! RANDD students are taught to recognize verbal and non-verbal clues used by their teachers, to code their notes using Chyten’s customized coding system, to differentiate notes into the three levels of information and to compartmentalize information for recall on tests and quizzes. Utilizing the powerful technique called “association” students memorize large amounts of information easily and without undo time or effort.

Classroom Management

Chyten’s RANDD Program teaches student what to say to teachers to make the teachers want to help them earn top grades. This is a long way from bringing the teacher an apple! Training the teacher? Absolutely. What could be more important than letting a teacher know you are serious about doing well in his/her class? Classroom management for students is innovative, creative and very effective.

Information Organization Utilization (IOU)

Never reread a chapter again. Utilizing an innovative strategy called IOU, RANDD students learn to create single-page chapter summaries that contain all the information they need to ace tests and quizzes.

Differentiated Reading

Novels have characters, plot settings and protagonists. Textbooks have headings, subheadings and graphics. Yet, many students read a textbook the same way they read a novel – or a magazine. It is imperative that students learn to differentiate their reading technique to fit the purpose and nature of the reading assignment.

Mid-Range Reading (Read 300 – 700 words per minute)

Amazing! The way we were all taught to read is both tedious and ineffective. Our brain works so much faster than our eyes – no wonder the brain goes to sleep and we experience “the blank page syndrome.” Chyten’s RANDD Program literally reprograms students’ eye-movements, thus speeding up the mechanics of reading while increasing comprehension. THIS IS NOT SPEED READING! It is EFFECTIVE READING.

Active Reading Strategies

Passive reading is far too common among students, contributing to poor comprehension and memorization. Becoming an active reader is essential to effective reading. Chyten’s instructors are experts at helping students become more involved in their reading – and the results can be amazing.

Time-Management and Organization

Should I study math first, or English? Evening or morning? Last minute scrambling to finish a project is not the way to earn high grades. Chyten teaches students to acknowledge their short and long term schedules and to plan their study times for maximum efficiency.

Test-Taking Strategies

From standardized tests to essays, test-taking strategies are essential to a student’s success. Chyten has long been considered a premier test-preparation service and shares its knowledge with students in a way that is clear, simple and easy to apply to tests and quizzes.

Study Environment

Where a student studies, what kind of lighting is there, background noise, music, telephone, TV or I-Pods, on a bed, at the kitchen table or at a desk – these are all factors in effective studying. Chyten helps students create an environment conducive to effective learning.

Chyten’s proprietary RANDD 14-session reading and study skills program transforms struggling students into star students by teaching them a series of proprietary study techniques and advanced reading techniques.

Chyten’s RANDD Reading and Study Skills Program may be the most important investment you’ll ever make in your child’s academic future.

Call (828) 505-2495 to discuss how RANDD can change your student’s life, with amazingly effective skills and strategies that will last a lifetime!

AP Classes…Can There Be Too Much of a Good Thing?

Do stacked schedules and a half-dozen exams offer an easy road to the elite institutions, or is that a recipe for student stress?

If you read the Boston Globe, then chances are you’ve heard the story of Claire Huang, the Lexington High senior who could graduate next spring with perfect scores on 10 advanced placement exams. The plan, Huang told the Globe, is for her AP classes to provide an edge when it comes to earning admittance in an elite college or university.

And if you live in Lexington, or Concord, or any of a number of leafy suburbs outside Boston, then chances are that if you don’t know Claire, you know probably know six students like her.

While many high performing school districts like Lexington have opted out of the Race to the Top federal education initiative, many students in towns like this are stacking their schedules in their own race to the top – of their class and, they hope, of the applicant pool for choice colleges and universities.

In recent years, however, the spotlight has shifted to student stress and there has been a bit of pushback against kids overloading schedules and taking as many AP exams as they think they can ace.

Last spring in Lexington, parents, students and educators held a facilitated community conversation about student stress, which followed screenings of the film ”Race to Nowhere.”

“We’re in a dangerous place and we all have a part in that,” said Laura Lasa, who is now the principal at Lexington High School, but who acted as moderator that night last May. “And it’s time to keep the discussions going, but it’s also time to start doing.”

It’s not just a public school thing. Concord Academy has eliminated all AP courses, replacing them with “Advanced Curriculum” courses that are more project-based, according to the Globe. Concord Academy does still offer AP exams, which can in some cases alleviate a student’s requirements once he or she gets into college.

“Taking eight AP classes your senior year instead of taking six AP classes is not going to make a difference to an admissions officer,” Peter Jennings, the director of college counseling at Concord Academy and a former Tufts admissions officer, told the Globe. “They’re much more interested in the life of the mind and the quality of the work that students are doing. I think that message gets distorted, and that creates the AP mania.”

By Patrick Ball, Patch.com

Three Common Myths About the SAT

Here are some of the biggest myths about the SAT, debunked!

Myth 1: Colleges prefer the SAT over the ACT

All four-year colleges in the U.S. now accept the ACT, and it is highly regarded. Some admissions professionals will even tell you that they prefer it over the SAT because it is based more on coursework and better reflects how a student will perform in college. From a student’s perspective, the ACT will fulfill the need for SAT Subject Tests at many colleges. Is your student interested in the ACT? They can take a free ACT vs SAT Comparison Test at Chyten to determine which is their best match.

Myth 2: Colleges only see the scores I send them

This is often accompanied by rumors like “it doesn’t matter how many times I take the SAT because colleges won’t see it,” or “I will just focus on one section of the SAT at a time because colleges will take my highest score for each section.”

Score Choice was implemented by the College Board in 2008, but colleges are allowed to set their own rules on what scores they require. A few of the more popular colleges that require all test scores include: Colgate, Cornell, Columbia, GW, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, Syracuse, Stanford, Tufts, Maryland, Penn, and Wesleyan. While many of these colleges state that they will still “superscore” (use the highest section across multiple test dates), the jury is still out on why they want all the scores. Some believe that they want to see how many times a student took the test. Most think it is simply in the interest of making certain that they have all the correct data to select the highest scores.

Myth 3: I don’t need to take SAT Subject Tests

First of all, you will need them if you are applying to the Ivy League, many small competitive liberal arts colleges (Amherst, Haverford, Williams, Vassar, etc.) or some popular universities like BC, BU, Duke, Georgetown, Tufts or UVA. Second, there is a large group of colleges that “recommend” SAT Subject Tests, let’s just say it’s a strong recommendation — they really like to see them. These institutions include: American University, George Washington, NYU, Northwestern, UNC-Chapel Hill and USC. Finally, some colleges that don’t require SAT Subject Tests in general, do require them for certain programs like engineering or nursing. A few even specify which subjects they require (Bio, Chem, Math Level II, etc.). The bottom line is that junior year is too early to cut off any options as to where you will be applying. And the best time to take them is at the end of sophomore or junior year for subjects you have just completed (i.e. if you just took U.S. History and Chemistry, take those tests); that way the material is fresh in your mind. To read more about SAT Subject tests, go here.

Chyten Announces Spring ACT Class

Chyten has announced a new ACT test preparation class, which will get students ready for the April ACT. Students will learn how to master the ACT material in this six-session class, which features unique strategies, content mastery and more!

Chyten’s classes are unique and effective from start to finish. Because we value the experience and expertise of teachers, all Chyten’s instructors are real teachers with Master’s degree or higher. Because we design amazing strategies, the strategic lessons learned will last a lifetime. Because we value relationships, all classes are kept small, so that teachers can get to know their students.

For practice and skill-building, Chyten has extensive banks of ACT questions of all types, actual and original. For strategy development, Chyten’s manual provides insights into the ACT you cannot get anywhere else. Classes take place on Saturdays from 12:00 – 4:00, and include two full length Magnostic ACT Diagnostic exams and all books and materials.

ACT Test Preparation Class

DAY DATE TIME
Saturday February 23, 2013 12:00 – 4:00
Saturday March 2, 2013 12:00 – 4:00
Saturday March 9, 2013 12:00 – 4:00
Saturday March 16, 2013 12:00 – 4:00
Saturday March 23, 2013 12:00 – 4:00
Saturday April 6, 2013 12:00 – 4:00

Course tuition is $985, and this includes all books, materials, and two free practice tests! To sign up, please call Chyten at (828) 505-2495 or click here to request more information.

Call to schedule! Classes fill up quickly!

Spring SAT Prep Class Being Offered!

Chyten Tutors and Test Preparation of Asheville has announced a Comprehensive SAT Prep course which will run across six Sundays, beginning March 10, 2013. This course is timed specifically so that students will be ready and warmed up for the May 4, 2013 test!

Chyten’s SAT classes offer a comprehensive overview of the SAT, and include a combination of skill-building exercises and test-taking strategies for tackling the test’s hardest questions. Students will learn:

Chyten’s Zig Zag MethodSM for Critical Reading breaks down traditional reading barriers and dramatically increases reading speed and comprehension. It makes rereading unnecessary, preserving valuable minutes. In addition, Chyten students are taught how to recognize and resist trap answers.

Chyten’s Grammar Simplification StrategySM turns even grammar-phobic students into excellent performers on the SAT. By breaking SAT grammar into its five major components and drilling with more than 600 original, categorized questions, Chyten students gain a sense of grammar mastery. Then, by practicing on up to 20 full-length tests, Chyten students earn a sense of test mastery.

Chyten’s Adaptable Essay Strategy allows students to craft a top-scoring essay that contains all the essential components necessary to earn top scores. Chyten’s essay methods have been so successful that Chyten students earn perfect essay scores at 50 times the national rate. According to the Boston Globe, “Prepping high-scoring essays using Chyten’s method can be enough to boost scores to heart-thumping numbers.”

Chyten’s SAT Math Strategies, complete with a topic breakdown and relative weighting of each question type. It then teaches students a series of subject-specific strategies along with general SAT Math strategies that include numeric and visual approximation, backward solving and strategic guessing. Chyten’s original Math Question Banks help student achieve mastery of all SAT Math topics.

SAT Test Preparation Class

Six Sundays, Beginning March 10, 2013 • Preparation for May 4th SAT

Each Sunday from 1:00 PM – 5:00 PM | 24 hours of expert instruction

DAY DATE TIME
Sunday March 10, 2013 1:00 – 5:00
Sunday March 17, 2013 1:00 – 5:00
Sunday April 7, 2013 1:00 – 5:00
Sunday April 14, 2013 1:00 – 5:00
Sunday April 21, 2013 1:00 – 5:00
Sunday April 28, 2013 1:00 – 5:00

ACT Official Describes ‘Next Generation’ Tests

By Eric Hoover

After the ACT announced plans this month for a new assessment system, an array of provocative headlines followed. The Associated Press proclaimed: “Kindergarten Career Test in the Works by ACT.”

Is that an accurate description?

Not really. On Thursday morning, Jon Erickson, president of the ACT’s education division, stopped by The Chronicle’s office to discuss the organization’s plans for its new “college and career readiness” testing system, a digital assessment scheduled to make its debut in 2014. Initially, the system will span grades 3 through 12; later it will expand to cover kindergarten through the second grade.

In short, the purpose of the new series of tests isn’t to identify the 5-year-olds who will go on to become doctors, engineers, and asbestos-removal technicians, as deliciously terrifying as that might sound. There will not be a question designed to weed out those who aren’t cut out to be astronauts.

As described by Mr. Erickson, the system will assess skills and knowledge associated with success in college and careers, starting with basic reading and mathematical ability, and then progressing to higher-level skills. It will track students’ academic progress and professional goals. And it will include measurements of “academic beh3.avioral skills,” such as teamwork and motivation.

The assessments, Mr. Erickson said, will help teachers understand which students need help with what as they go along (within courses, at the end of courses, and at the end of the academic year). “This will provide a running movie of students,” he said, “rather than a single snapshot in time.”

I asked Mr. Erickson what admissions and enrollment officers should know about the tests, which would culminate with the ACT examination. “First, they should know that, hopefully, the pool of students will be larger and more prepared, and that they will hopefully see a reduction in the need for remediation,” he said. “Second, there will be opportunities for them to get a feel for what the coming groups of students look like, what their interests are.”

Many details—such as the content of the tests, and the costs to states that adopt the assessments—have yet to be revealed. In the coming months, some educators will probably hail the ACT’s new system as a breakthrough even as others, wary of too much testing, will condemn it.

Mr. Erickson described the system as a way of unlocking the power of data in real time—and of confronting challenges students encounter well before they’re old enough to apply to college. “We know that if you’re off-track even by middle school,” Mr. Erickson said, “it can be too late.”

Read the full article in the Chronicle of Higher Education.