
Originally published on 5 November 2015 in the Pasadena Independent, Arcadia Weekly, Monrovia Weekly, and Sierra Madre Weekly
The road to college
FRESHMAN
Your children have come this far into their 9th grade and should be fully settled in on their courses and their teachers’ teaching style. Hopefully, they have found some new friends among their classmates, and have adjusted to high school life in general.
Encourage your children to focus on their studies and to make use of all the resources available at their school to accomplish all the work required to pass their course. The goal is not just to pass, however, but to make the best grade they are capable of getting. Ideally, they should be up-to-speed in all their classes but if there is anything about the course they can’t grasp, they need to seek assistance from teachers. Most of them will meet with students after class to provide the necessary tutorial lesson. They have to ask right away or they will fall behind all the more as the school year wears on. All the grades they earn are reported and their GPA is the single most important component of the academic picture they present to the universities to which they will apply. It will show how well they did in high school and how prepared they are to go into college.
By now they should have participated in some sports events their school competes in; they should have identified other extra-curricular activities they want to be involved in.
SOPHOMORE
Most schools look at 10th grade as a fundamental year in high school. Your children should have already made a smooth transition from their middle school life and are actively exploring their various interests and are applying these towards extra-curricular work. They should be actively participating in sports, or arts, their school newspaper or their yearbook.
The class deans should be working with your children in evaluating their class performance and workload to make sure they are on track and are making the grade. Together with their class dean, your children should be addressing preparations for standardized testing and junior year course options.
Additionally, your children can start looking at various colleges offering the course they might consider taking.
JUNIOR
This is an important year for your children. They should register for all the standardized tests required for college application. They need to be in constant communication with their counselor to ensure they on track for graduation and college admission.
Encourage your children to focus on getting good grades. This year is the last complete school year grades the college admissions officers will see when your children send in their application. Their GPA is the most reliable and significant predictor of how well they are ready for college work.
Most high schools in the area have held college fairs on campus and you and your children have met the representatives of the various colleges and universities to which they might consider applying. Your children should be researching these schools’ requirements and keeping track of the schools which offer the courses they are interested in pursuing.
SENIORS
Your children should take the SAT Subject Test if the college they’re applying to requires it They also should have already sent or should be ready to dispatch their application if they were trying for Early Action (EA) or Early Decision (ED). They should notify the colleges of any honors they received since mailing their application, and they have to make sure their school sends out a recent transcript, and all their standardized test results have been forwarded. As they await word from the college, they might want to keep writing all the supplemental essays required by the universities to which they will apply if they don’t get into their EA/ED school. Acceptance to their EA school isn’t binding so they can still apply to other colleges, thus not limiting their options.
In the meantime, you children should make sure they are doing well academically. Some universities require the first semester grades, or the first quarter grades if they’re applying for EA/ED. In fact, your children shouldn’t let up on academics because a college can still rescind their offer of acceptance if students grades’ have fallen below acceptable level.
Likewise, make sure your children are continuing to participate in athletics and extra-curricular activities. These sometimes help them relieve the stress of the college application process.
This is also the time to research scholarships. Some websites that could prove useful are: Affordable Colleges Online (http://www.affordablecollegesonline.org/graduating-debt-free; CollegeXpress (www.collegexpress.com); Fastweb (www.fastweb.com); Free Application for Federal Student aid (www.fafsa.ed.gov); National Merit Scholarship Corporation (www.nationalmerit.org); Scholarships.com (www.scholarships.com); Scholarships360 (www.scholarshops360.org); Student Aid on the Web (www.studentaid.ed.gov). You and your children should talk to their school’s financial aid officer for guidance on willing out financial aid applications.










