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Junior Year
Higher Education Timeline: Junior Year
Fall
- Meet with your counselor to review the courses you’ve taken,
and see what you still need to take.
- Check your class rank. Even if your grades haven’t been that
good so far, it’s never too late to improve. Colleges like to
see an upward trend.
- If you didn’t do so in tenth grade, sign up for and take the
PSAT/NMSQT. In addition to National Merit Scholarships, this is the
qualifying test for the National Scholarship Service and Fund for
Negro Students and National Hispanic Scholar Recognition Program.
- Make sure that you have a Social Security number.
- Take a long, hard look at why you want to continue your education
after high school so you will be able to choose the best college or
university for your needs.
- Make a list of colleges that meet your most important criteria (size,
location, distance from home, majors, academic rigor, housing, and
cost). Weigh each of the factors according to their importance to
you.
- Continue visiting college fairs. You may be able to narrow your
choices or add a college to your list.
- Speak to college representatives who visit your high school.
- If you want to participate in Division I or Division II sports in
college, start the certification process. Check with your counselor
to make sure you are taking a core curriculum that meets NCAA requirements.
- If you are interested in one of the military academies, talk to
you guidance counselor about starting the application process now.
Winter
- Collect information about college application procedures, entrance
requirements, tuition and fees, room and board costs, student activities,
course offerings, faculty composition, accreditation, and financial
aid. The Internet is a good way to visit colleges and obtain this
information. Begin comparing the schools by the factors that you consider
to be most important.
- Discuss you PSAT score with your counselor.
- Begin narrowing down your college choices. Find out if the colleges
you are interested in require the SAT I, ACT Assessment, or SAT II
Subject Tests for admission.
- Register for the ACT Assessment, which is usually taken in April
or June. You can take it again late in your junior year or in the
fall of your senior year, if necessary.
- Begin preparing for the tests you’ve decided to take.
- Have a discussion with your parents about the colleges in which
you are interested. Examine financial resources, and gather information
about financial aid.
- Set up a filing system with individual folders for each college’s
correspondence and printed materials.
Spring
- Meet with your counselor to review senior-year course selection
and graduation requirements.
- Discuss ACT Assessment/SAT I scores with your counselor. Register
to take the ACT Assessment and/or SAT I again if you’d like
to try to improve your score.
- Discuss the college essay with your guidance counselor or English
teacher.
- Stay involved with your extracurricular activities. Colleges look
for consistency and depth in activities.
- Consider whom you will ask to write your recommendations. Think
about asking teachers who know you well and who will write positive
letters about you. Letters from a coach, activity leader, or an adult
who knows you well outside of school (e.g., volunteer work contact)
are also valuable.
- Inquire about personal interviews at your favorite colleges. Call
or write for early summer appointments. Make necessary travel arrangements.
- See your counselor to apply for on-campus summer programs for high
school students. Apply for a summer job or internship. Be prepared
to pay for college application, financial aid, and testing fees in
fall.
- Request applications from schools you’re interested in by
mail or via the Internet.
Summer
- Visit the campuses of your top-five college choices.
- After each college interview, send a thank-you letter to the interviewer.
- Talk to people you know who have attended the colleges in which
you are interested.
- Continue to read books, magazines, and newspapers.
- Practice filling out college applications, and then complete the
final application forms or apply online through the Websites of the
colleges in which you’re interested.
- Volunteer in your community.
- Compose rough drafts of your college essays. Have a teacher read
and discuss them with you. Proofread them, and prepare final drafts.
Proofread your final essays at least three times.
- Develop a financial aid application plan, including a list of the
aid sources, requirements for each application, and a timetable for
meeting the filing deadlines.
Senior
Year >
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