Fall 2008 Parent Opportunities to Meet College Admission Officers

<p>Hi, everyone,</p>

<p>Many years ago I began attending National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) National College Fair </p>

<p>NACAC</a> National College Fairs </p>

<p>events, as research for my personal Web site. </p>

<p>In 2003 at the Minnesota National College Fair, my son and I were invited at the Harvard booth there to attend a Harvard-specific regional information meeting at Southwest High School later that fall. That was my first experience with college regional information sessions, which I have found to be very informative and a good supplement to college fairs. I'll mention both kinds of events in this message. </p>

<p>The NACAC National College Fairs </p>

<p>NACAC</a> National College Fairs </p>

<p>and NACAC Performing & Visual Arts College Fairs </p>

<p>NACAC</a> Performing & Visual Arts College Fairs </p>

<p>are large events, often held in convention centers, with usually hundreds of colleges sending representatives. Not all colleges attend the same NACAC college fairs, so the colleges that appear at the nearest NACAC event to your town may be different from those appearing in another town. I find NACAC college fairs seriously overstimulating :) but very interesting and informative. Most include a certain number of seminar sessions on specialized topics as well as the opportunity to meet dozens of college representatives in their convention exhibitor booths.</p>

<p>There are some regional associations of college admission counselors that organize regional college fairs too, and other national organizations that organize college fairs. Below are links to some examples of those events. </p>

<p>National Scholarship Service (NSS) </p>

<p>NSS</a> - College Fairs </p>

<p>Hawai'i ACAC </p>

<p>College</a> Fairs </p>

<p>MACAC Minnesota Education Fair </p>

<p>[MACAC[/url</a>] </p>

<p>New England Association for College Admission Counseling </p>

<p>[url=<a href="http://www.neacac.org/cf_fall.cfm%5DFall"&gt;http://www.neacac.org/cf_fall.cfm]Fall&lt;/a> Fair Schedule - NEACAC](<a href="http://www.mn-acac.org/?s=fairs_mef&print=true%5DMACAC%5B/url"&gt;http://www.mn-acac.org/?s=fairs_mef&print=true) </p>

<p>Pacific Northwest Association for College Admission Counseling </p>

<p>College</a> Fairs </p>

<p>Pennsylvania Association for College Admission Counseling </p>

<p>PACAC</a> - Pennsylvania College Fairs Search | PACAC </p>

<p>(list of Pennsylvania fairs is an Excel file linked from that page) </p>

<p>Rocky Mountain Association of College Admission Counseling </p>

<p>RMACAC.ORG</a> - The Rocky Mountain Association of College Admission Counseling </p>

<p>Western Association for College Admission Counseling </p>

<p>[WACAC[/url</a>] </p>

<p>(with links to other documents with schedules from that page) </p>

<p>Wisconsin Education Fairs </p>

<p>[url=<a href="http://www.wefs.org/locations%5DWisconsin"&gt;http://www.wefs.org/locations]Wisconsin&lt;/a> Education Fairs Fall Schedule](<a href="http://wacac.org/index.php/college_fairs/schedules_and_registration/%5DWACAC%5B/url"&gt;http://wacac.org/index.php/college_fairs/schedules_and_registration/)&lt;/p>

<p>Sometimes particular secondary schools or school districts or consortiums of schools or other organizations organize local college fairs. </p>

<p>Fairfax County Public Schools </p>

<p>College</a> Fair and College Night Information </p>

<p>(large event in Virginia) </p>

<p>CSRA College Night </p>

<p>Education</a> Outreach Programs - CSRA College Night </p>

<p>(regional event in Georgia) </p>

<p>College Fairs of Greater Denver, Inc. </p>

<p>College</a> Fairs of Greater Denver, Inc. - College Nights and Fair Dates</p>

<p>Sometimes particular secondary schools or school districts or consortiums of schools or other organizations organize local college fairs. </p>

<p>Fairfax County Public Schools </p>

<p>College</a> Fair and College Night Information </p>

<p>(large event in Virginia) </p>

<p>CSRA College Night </p>

<p>Education</a> Outreach Programs - CSRA College Night </p>

<p>(regional event in Georgia) </p>

<p>College Fairs of Greater Denver, Inc. </p>

<p>College</a> Fairs of Greater Denver, Inc. - College Nights and Fair Dates </p>

<p>Colleges also have their own regional information sessions, by themselves or with just a few other colleges. Some prospective students travel here to Minnesota from Iowa or South Dakota to attend regional information sessions--that's still less expensive than traveling to the college, in some cases. Some regional events happen in the summer, and a few websites are not yet complete with a full schedule of fall meetings. If you know of other Web links like this, feel free to share them in replies to this thread. I'll first list consortium programs and then list programs of individual colleges. Some colleges that participate in consortium programs have plenty of individual programs too. </p>

<p>Claremont Colleges (Claremont McKenna, Harvey Mudd, Pitzer and Scripps Colleges) </p>

<p>Claremont</a> Colleges Receptions, One The Road, Admission, Claremont McKenna College, Claremont McKenna College </p>

<p>Colleges That Change Lives Consortium (about thirty liberal arts colleges from Agnes Scott College to Whitman College) </p>

<p>CTCL</a> Events | Colleges That Change Lives </p>

<p>Exploring College Options consortium (Duke, Georgetown, Harvard, Penn, and Stanford) </p>

<p>Exploring</a> College Options </p>

<p>Exploring Educational Excellence Consortium (Brown, Chicago, Columbia, Cornell, and Rice) </p>

<p>Exploring</a> Educational Excellence </p>

<p>Eight of the Best Colleges consortium (Claremont McKenna College, Colorado College, Connecticut College, Grinnell College, Haverford College, Kenyon College, Macalester College, Sarah Lawrence College) </p>

<p>Eight</a> of the Best, One The Road, Admission, Claremont McKenna College </p>

<p>Admission</a> Staff on the Road: Sarah Lawrence College </p>

<p>Lutherancolleges.org </p>

<p>Map</a> & Schedule</p>

<p>Many colleges post lists of regional information sessions. In some cases those are stand-alone events, and in other cases they are participation by that college in local or regional college fairs or high school visits, not all of which may be open to the public. Some of these websites are still being updated. </p>

<p>American University </p>

<p>AU</a> Visits You </p>

<p>Amherst College</p>

<p><a href="https://cms.amherst.edu/admission/road%5B/url%5D"&gt;https://cms.amherst.edu/admission/road&lt;/a> </p>

<p>Arizona State University</p>

<p>ASU</a> Near You </p>

<p>Barnard College </p>

<p>Barnard</a> College Admissions </p>

<p>Bates College </p>

<p>Bates</a> College | Alumni/ae Interviews </p>

<p>Bentley College </p>

<p>college_fair</a> : Bentley </p>

<p>Boston College</p>

<p>Eagle</a> Overview - Boston College </p>

<p>(The Boston College Web page is not laid out correctly for browser
independence.)</p>

<p>Boston University</p>

<p>Boston</a> University Admissions - Receptions </p>

<p>Brown University</p>

<p>Brown</a> Admission: Brown Near You </p>

<p>Butler University </p>

<p>Counselor</a> Travel - Go to Butler University! </p>

<p>California Institute of Technology (Caltech)</p>

<p>Caltech</a> Undergraduate Admissions: Caltech In Your City </p>

<p>Carnegie Mellon University</p>

<p>Carnegie</a> Mellon Visits You </p>

<p>Case Western Reserve University</p>

<p>Case</a> Western Reserve University - Alumni Interview Request </p>

<p>Claremont Colleges</p>

<p>Claremont</a> Colleges Receptions, One The Road, Admission, Claremont McKenna College, Claremont McKenna College </p>

<p>Clark University</p>

<p>College</a> Fairs Listed by Date | Undergraduate Admissions ~ Clark University </p>

<p>Colby College</p>

<p>Colby</a> College | Admissions & Financial Aid | Off-Campus Interviews </p>

<p>Colgate University </p>

<p>Colgate:</a> Colgate On The Road </p>

<p>Columbia University</p>

<p>Columbia</a> University Office of Undergraduate Admissions - Introductions to Columbia </p>

<p>Connecticut College </p>

<p>Connecticut</a> College : Admission - Connecticut College Visiting You </p>

<p>Cornell College (Mount Vernon, Iowa) </p>

<p><a href="http://www.cornellcollege.edu/admissions/visiting/offcampus.shtml%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.cornellcollege.edu/admissions/visiting/offcampus.shtml&lt;/a> </p>

<p>Cornell University (Ithaca, New York) </p>

<p>Cornell</a> University Undergraduate Admissions Office - EVENTS </p>

<p>Culinary Institute of America </p>

<p>Events</a> in Your Area-The Culinary Institute of America </p>

<p>Dartmouth College </p>

<p>Dartmouth</a> In Your City </p>

<p>Davidson College</p>

<p>Davidson</a> in Your Area </p>

<p>DePauw University</p>

<p>DePauw</a> University: Admission Visit Events </p>

<p>Duke University</p>

<p>Duke</a> University Admissions Website </p>

<p>Emory University</p>

<p>Emory</a> in your area </p>

<p>Georgetown University</p>

<p>Georgetown</a> University- Office of Undergraduate Admissions </p>

<p>Harvard University</p>

<p>Harvard</a> College Admissions Office: Harvard in Your Hometown </p>

<p>Harvey Mudd College </p>

<p>Mudd</a> on the Road </p>

<p>Haverford College </p>

<p>Haverford</a> College Office of Admission: Meet a Counselor in Your Area </p>

<p>Indiana University: Bloomington</p>

<p><a href="https://www.indiana.edu/%7Eiuadmit/events/index.php%5B/url%5D"&gt;https://www.indiana.edu/~iuadmit/events/index.php&lt;/a> </p>

<p>Johns Hopkins University</p>

<p>Hopkins</a> Undergraduate Admissions :: Visit :: Off-Campus Events :: Explore Hopkins Information Sessions </p>

<p>Kenyon College </p>

<p>Kenyon</a> Comes to You - Kenyon College </p>

<p>Lake Forest College </p>

<p>Lake</a> Forest College > Lake Forest on the Road </p>

<p>Lander University </p>

<p>LU</a> on the Road </p>

<p>Lehigh University</p>

<p>Lehigh</a> University :: Admissions: Evening Programs </p>

<p>Lesley College </p>

<p>LESLEY</a> COLLEGE | Let's wake up the world </p>

<p>Linfield College</p>

<p>Campus</a> Visit: Fairs and Visits </p>

<p>Macalester College </p>

<p>Macalester</a> Admissions </p>

<p>Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)</p>

<p>MIT</a> Admissions: Fall Recruitment Travel Schedule </p>

<p>McDaniel College </p>

<p>McDaniel</a> in Your Area </p>

<p>Meredith College </p>

<p>Meredith</a> College Admissions : Meredith on the Road </p>

<p>Mount Ida College </p>

<p>Mount</a> Ida College: On the Road </p>

<p>New York University</p>

<p>NYU</a> Off-Campus Information Session </p>

<p>Newbury College </p>

<p>Newbury</a> College - Admission - Financial Aid - Newbury On The Road </p>

<p>Northeastern University</p>

<p>Northeastern</a> University Undergraduate Admissions > Visit Campus > NU In Your Area </p>

<p>Northwestern University</p>

<p>Northwestern</a> Comes to You, Office of Undergraduate Admission - Northwestern University </p>

<p>Norwich University </p>

<p>Norwich</a> University On the Road </p>

<p>Oberlin College</p>

<p>Oberlin</a> Visits | Oberlin on the Road </p>

<p>Pennsylvania State University (Penn State)</p>

<p>Penn</a> State Visits You! - Penn State Undergraduate Admissions </p>

<p>Princeton University</p>

<p>Princeton</a> University | Princeton on the Road </p>

<p>Reed College</p>

<p>Reed</a> College Admission Office </p>

<p>(Following the Reed links to particular state events or using the
clickable map may resize your Web browser window or do other nasty things.)</p>

<p>Rice University</p>

<p>Rice</a> University | Prospective Students </p>

<p>Savannah College of Art and Design</p>

<p>Savannah</a> College of Art and Design > SCAD Information Sessions </p>

<p>(The SCAD page is not very well designed from a Web usability point of
view.)</p>

<p>Smith College </p>

<p>Smith</a> College: Smith on the Road </p>

<p>Stanford University</p>

<p>Stanford</a> in Your Area : Stanford University </p>

<p>Truman State University </p>

<p>Find</a> Counselor Events in Your Area - Office of Admission - Truman State University </p>

<p>University of Chicago</p>

<p>University</a> of Chicago College Admissions | Chicago Visits You </p>

<p>University of Miami</p>

<p>Events</a> in Your Area | University of Miami </p>

<p>University of Minnesota Twin Cities</p>

<p>College</a> Fairs </p>

<p>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill</p>

<p>UNC</a> : VISITING CAROLINA : IN YOUR TOWN </p>

<p>University of Pennsylvania (Penn)</p>

<p>Penn</a> Admissions: Penn in Your Town </p>

<p>University of Redlands </p>

<p>University</a> of Redlands - Redlands in Your Area </p>

<p>University of Rochester</p>

<p>University</a> of Rochester : Events in Your Area </p>

<p>University of Virginia</p>

<p>U.Va</a>. Office of Admission > U.Va. Visits You </p>

<p>(includes links to joint sessions of Virginia with other colleges) </p>

<p>Vanderbilt University</p>

<p>Vanderbilt</a> University Road Show </p>

<p>Vassar College</p>

<p>Vassar</a> College || College Fair Schedule </p>

<p>Villanova University </p>

<p>Villanova</a> Visits You </p>

<p>Washington University in St. Louis</p>

<p>Admissions</a> Receptions </p>

<p>Wesleyan University</p>

<p>Wesleyan</a> University : Admission </p>

<p>Wheaton College</p>

<p><a href="http://www.wheaton.edu/admissions/UndGrad/contact/collegefairs.php4%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.wheaton.edu/admissions/UndGrad/contact/collegefairs.php4&lt;/a> </p>

<p>Whitman College</p>

<p>Admission</a> Officer Travel </p>

<p>Wilkes Honors College (Florida Atlantic University) </p>

<p>Wilkes</a> Honors College </p>

<p>Yale University</p>

<p><a href="http://admissions.yale.edu/events/%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://admissions.yale.edu/events/&lt;/a> </p>

<p>Please let me know of any other regional college visits you have heard about. </p>

<p>P.S. If you are planning to attend any of these meetings this fall, I'd be grateful if you post a visit report to this thread.</p>

<p>Are there any Fairs overseas? I live in Turkey.</p>

<p>Yes, sometimes colleges travel to other countries and announce those trips on their websites. I think I have seen destinations in Turkey before. Many colleges are still posting this information in the next month or so.</p>

<p>The posts in this thread have been updated as of August 2008. Please let us know of other links in replies to this thread, and feel free to post reports about these events here too.</p>

<p>i just care to congratulate you on your effort.</p>

<p>wish you the best!</p>

<p>A question came up locally. Does anyone have a schedule for joint meetings by Carleton, Bowdoin, Pomona, and Swarthmore, or some combination of these colleges?</p>

<p>Are the admissions staff who are part of tours and fairs also visiting high schools during the day or is that left to other staff? </p>

<p>I'm trying to figure out when colleges will be visiting our area and alert S to the their likely visits to his school. Colleges don't list individual high school visits on their websites. Any tips for how to anticipate or track these?</p>

<p>Yesterday S missed a visit from a school he's considering because the school posted the visit at the last minute and he was in band during morning announcements, blasting on a trumpet. Then I noticed the college must be in town because I decided to look at websites for other high schools in our area and could see the school was visiting at least two others. Didn't see that until 45 minutes after the college's visit to S's school was over so the text message I sent was too late.</p>

<p>
[quote]
Are the admissions staff who are part of tours and fairs also visiting high schools during the day

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Typically they do that on the same trip.</p>

<p>Thanks for answering that. What do you recommend if you know a college is visiting schools in your area but is not visiting your child's high school (and no local group reception/fair)?</p>

<p>I haven't tried it myself, but I would recommend contacting some other local high school and seeing if your child can visit the information session there. The high school might be glad to have the event be better attended, even if not all of the attendees are students of that high school. </p>

<p>It's sometimes possible to contact admission officers responsible for a particular region of the country through some of the links on this thread. Perhaps those officers would have other ideas about how to meet your child while in town.</p>

<p>Here is a report on the Tuesday 16 September 2008 Discover Duke information session in Minnetonka, Minnesota. I had attended Exploring College Options sessions that included Duke three times before, but this is the first time I saw Duke's solo information session. The persons present representing Duke were senior admissions officer Will Dixon (Trinity College, Duke University '84 and Duke Law '88), the new admission officer for the Minnesota docket, and Donna E. Lisker, Associate Dean, Undergraduate Education. My son was not able to attend because he had a computer science class that evening at the University of Minnesota. The hotel hosting the session has been used in previous years for information sessions by Carnegie Mellon and other colleges. I knew it had some bus service, even though the hotel is far out in the suburbs, and when the whole session was over, I was surprised to see a bus in the vicinity--the latest bus service in my neighborhood, which is not too far away, ceases much earlier. </p>

<p>Check-in was at a table outside the hotel meeting room. I was surprised to see that not only was coffee and cold water served, but also teas of various kinds and at least eight varieties of canned soft drinks. The check-in table had a color brochure about Duke and separate hand-outs with a freshman class profile and information about financial aid. Both Duke representatives encouraged visitors to take the hand-outs as visitors filled out information cards. </p>

<p>My rough estimate is that about fifty parents or high school students were in the room for the information session. I recognized a few people in the room from activities of our state association about gifted education. Most people in the room would presumably be categorized as "white" or "black," and most were evidently middle-class. </p>

<p>Mr. Dixon began the meeting by encouraging us to ask questions. He said they wouldn't be able to cover enough information in one session to answer all possible questions about Duke. He encouraged visitors to browse the Duke website after the session: "Look at the back rooms of the website to really get a feel of what Duke is all about." </p>

<p>Mr. Dixon began by talking about the academic and learning environment at Duke. He said the Research Triangle region North Carolina in which Duke is located has an overall population of about 1.5 million and includes other universities such as the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina State University at Raleigh, and North Carolina Central University (a historically black university in Durham near Duke) as well as various smaller colleges. The Research Triangle Park includes several industrial and academic research facilities and results in the region having perhaps the highest concentration of Ph.D- and M.D.-holders per capita of any region of the United States. Duke's campus includes the 55-acre Duke Gardens, which include full wireless access. </p>

<p>As for what makes Duke different, Duke is younger than most peer universities, having been founded in 1924, and former president of Duke and United States Senator Terry Sanford said that Duke is "a university of outrageous ambition." There have been major building projects and growth of facilities and programs in recent years. Dean Lisker said, "The spaces on campus reflect the integration of student life." Mr. Dixon said, "Interdisciplinary studies are important. Bring your ideas and questions; challenge your professors and your fellow students." </p>

<p>About 90 percent of class are taught by professors. All freshmen are required to take seminar classes, which are capped at fifteen students. </p>

<p>The campus is 9,000 acres in size, of which 7,000 are the Duke Forest. The slide show projected during the info sessions showed Duke's photograph of a TINY snowman, usually shown to Minnesota audiences. Dean Lisker commented that the last few years there had been no accumulation of snow in Durham at any time in winter. </p>

<p>There are about 6,300 undergraduate students and about 6,700 graduate and professional school students at Duke. Undergraduates are required to live on campus for the first three years of enrollment. Duke's founding document includes a requirement that 15 percent of students come from the Carolinas, and so 13 percent of students are from North Carolina and 2 percent from South Carolina. Currently 21 percent of students are from the Midwest, and Duke would like to raise that percentage. About 44 percent of students are students of color, and Mr. Dixon thought that figure might include international students in the overall count. </p>

<p>The campus is divided in the East Campus, West Campus, North Campus, and Central Campus. The East Campus is the home of freshmen; there are thirteen residence halls there, and classrooms for arts and humanities courses. The East Campus was the former women's college of Duke University, so it has its own library and dining. The Duke representatives showed a slide including Duke Chapel as he talked about the West Campus, where sophomores live, and where administrative offices, professional schools, sports facilities, and engineering classes are located. </p>

<p>Mr. Dixon said you choose a college in Duke University to apply to as an undergraduate, either the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences or the Pratt School of Engineering. Once admitted, you can take courses from any college. The Pratt School of Engineering offers four majors, all leading to a B.S. degree. All Duke students have a broad-based liberal arts education. Mr. Dixon said, "We want engineers to take skills into the world to have a positive humanitarian impact." Dean Lisker said, "We can take a great idea and implement it, as a young university." A new Duke University program recently is the Rebuilding from Ruins project to help the reconstruction of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. </p>

<p>Trinity College enrolls 83 percent of Duke undergraduates and offers more than forty majors and minors. Dean Lisker said, "We require three semesters of foreign language, either by class attendance or by demonstrated competence from high school study." Mr. Dixon said, "We look for scores of 4 or 5 on AP tests and may grant credit for some AP scores." Certificate programs are a new thing at Duke. They provide opportunities for interdisciplinary learning. Program II is an opportunity for self-designed majors. Usually Program II majors are more difficult than traditional majors, because the student has to show a lot of initiative to design the program. About 30 percent of Trinity College students aspire to attend medical school; ANY major is possible as a pre-med major. </p>

<p>Dean Lisker said, "There are integrated experiences, known as clusters, available to freshmen. This is called the Focus Program." There is also $30 million to fund intensive service projects for any interested undergraduate in the Duke Engage program. This is a brand-new program, only in its second year, and already it has sent more than 360 Duke students all over the world. </p>

<p>Extracurricular activities at Duke include more than 400 clubs, with sports or academic emphases. Duke has a strong team in the Putnam math competition. Students can found new clubs and get funding for them. </p>

<p>Mr. Dixon said, "We are looking for truly diverse students--and I'm not just talking about ethnicity--with a wide range of interests, who in the future will succeed in many different occupations." </p>

<p>The Duke representatives then described Duke's admission process. Each application file gets two cover-to-cover readings, the second reading being by a regional reader. Mr. Dixon reads for Minnesota and several other upper Midwest states. Each regional reader sees about 1,200 application files, of which about 350 will go to committee consideration after the first two readings. Admission officers read continually from November 1st to March 15th. Mr. Dixon said, "We get on the phone to counselors or teachers to check issues in the admission files." </p>

<p>What Duke looks for are strong academic credentials, a love of learning and an inclination to take advantage of opportunities, and impact on the community. About 80 percent of the applicants plainly have strong academic credentials. If we consider the admissions factors we consider as an array, with grades on one end and test scores as the other end, our usual question is, "What's in the middle?" We want to know what the impact of the student will be in Duke's freshman class. </p>

<p>Duke accepts the Common Application or the Universal College Application, in either case with a Duke supplement. You can apply either early decision or regular decision. You can apply either to Trinity College or to Pratt. There is no disadvantage to applying on paper rather than online. All paper applications are scanned and made into electronic files for the admission office. </p>

<p>In more detail, Duke considers </p>

<p>strength of curriculum </p>

<p>grades in academic courses (grade 9 to grade 12) Duke asks the question, "How have you challenged yourself?" </p>

<p>standardized test scores either from the SAT and two SAT Subject Tests (with one Subject Test being a math test for Pratt applicants) or from the ACT with writing </p>

<p>school recommendations "How did you deal with disappointment?" </p>

<p>extracurricular activities "Tie in how your commitment has impacted you; not just a list of activities in high school. Show some sacrifice, leadership, and service." </p>

<p>essays "It's September; please start your essays NOW if you haven't already." The essay has to be your best writing. We receive more than 20,000 applications a year, so we've seen it all. We can tell when an essay has been written by an adult. Your distinctive voice makes an essay stand out. </p>

<p>The personal aspects of the application such as the school recommendations, ECs, and essays are the "middle" and what the Duke admission office really looks for. </p>

<p>Duke does NOT consider for admission </p>

<p>ability to pay </p>

<p>expressed interest [including attending an information such as the one described here] </p>

<p>the number of other applicants from your high school we might take more than a dozen from one high school </p>

<p>Duke receives more than 20,000 applications, and has a 21 percent base admission rate. There were 1499 early decision applicants in a recent year, with a 31 percent acceptance rate. Early decision students make up about 27 percent of the new enrolled class at Duke. Early decision is binding. We will work with you if our financial aid offer doesn't appear to meet your need. Financial need is a basis for being released from the early decision commitment. </p>

<p>Financial aid at Duke is great. Don't say, "My family can't afford it." NO student will graduate with more than $20,000 in loans. That sounds like a lot, but at some other colleges a student might graduate with $60,000 in loans. For family incomes under $60,000, there is no expected family contribution. For family incomes under $40,000, there are no loans at all in the financial aid package. </p>

<p>Consideration for Duke's merit scholarship programs is built into the application process and doesn't require a separate application. </p>

<p>Then the Duke officers opened up the meeting to questions. </p>

<p>A student asked: Is there transfer credit for dual enrollment in college as part of a student's high school program? </p>

<p>Dean Lisker answered: The general rule is that there is no credit for high school work. </p>

<p>Mr. Dixon followed up by asking: Who runs the dual enrollment program? </p>

<p>The student said: It's the College in the Schools program run by the University of Minnesota. </p>

<p>Mr Dixon said: It would have to be a college class to possibly get credit. </p>

<p>Parent Q: What is Duke's policy about AP credit? </p>

<p>Lisker: Duke usually requires thirty-four semester courses for graduation, and AP credit can waive two of those. Other AP test results are used for course placement. </p>

<p>Dixon: Duke academic departments determine what AP scores mean. </p>

<p>Lisker: Prematriculation course credits (dual enrollment, AP. or IB) are all treated much the same. </p>

<p>Student Q: Is it bad not to take a foreign language class in senior year of high school after taking the same language for years since elementary school? </p>

<p>Dixon: We look at the total transcript. You've done a lot in that language, and maybe in senior year you need to clear your schedule to take other courses, which we understand. We look at how you challenge yourself. </p>

<p>Parent [Duke graduate school alumnus] Q: Does Duke have a combined undergraduate-medical school program, as some universities do? </p>

<p>Lisker: Duke Medical School does not have a combined program with the Duke undergraduate colleges. </p>

<p>Student Q: What if your high school doesn't offer a foreign language? </p>

<p>Lisker: We look at your school and what was possible for you there. </p>

<p>Student Q: What if I have taken one year of college Latin as a dual-enrollment [PSEO, a Minnesota program] student at the University of Minnesota? </p>

<p>Lisker: EVERYONE at Duke takes at least one semester of foreign language courses. Previous high school study or proficiency examination allows higher placement in the sequence, which at Duke is usually three semesters of Duke study of a foreign language. </p>

<p>Dixon: For admission purposes, we look at what your high school offers. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Do admitted students contact their advisers before arriving at campus? </p>

<p>Lisker: Students contact advisers by email during the summer. After arrival on campus, there is a two-week add-drop period, which many students use to change their course schedules. </p>

<p>Parent Q: How about the undergraduate Focus Program? </p>

<p>Lisker: After being admitted to Duke, you apply for the Focus Program in the summer. </p>

<p>Parent Q: How is the admission rate for Duke graduates into graduate school? [The parent should have said, "professional school."] </p>

<p>Dixon: 85 percent of the Duke students who apply to medical school are admitted, as are more than 90 percent who apply to law school. As for the Duke professional schools, they know the quality of a Duke undergraduate education. </p>

<p>Parent Q: How is the Duke alumni community? Is it active in Minnesota? </p>

<p>[Duke graduate school alumnus] parent: I'm a graduate school alumnus here in Minnesota, and I feel connected. </p>

<p>Lisker: The Duke alumni are a vibrant group. </p>

<p>Dixon: We joke about the New York to London Shuttle of Duke alumni who live in either New York or London and fly frequently to the other city on business. </p>

<p>After the meeting was adjourned, I stayed around to listen to some one-on-one questions from other families, and introduced myself to admission officer Will Dixon. I thought it was an informative and interesting meeting. I'm sure my son would not submit an early decision application anywhere, but we will discuss further whether or not he would like to apply to Duke in the regular round next year.</p>

<p>Tokenadult, I noticed that you mentioned attending the Exploring College Options meeting. What was your general impression of it, if you don't mind me asking? Was it helpful/informative? I am attending the ECO meeting in my town (Little Rock, AR) today.</p>

<p>I like Exploring Colleges as a quick overview of the five colleges (Duke, Georgetown, Harvard, Penn, and Stanford) that attend. That meeting can be more or less useful depending on how much the five colleges are able to spread out after the general session into different parts of the meeting location for one-on-one discussion with the admission officer from one or two colleges you are most interested in hearing about. Exploring College Options meetings are good for getting a lot of general questions answered that relate to other colleges too. </p>

<p>I'll be interested to hear your impressions of the meeting you attend.</p>

<p>Thank you for your response. I'm hoping I can get some more information! From what I've read, these meetings seem to be worthwhile.</p>

<p>I'll post my impressions after I attend, sure! :)</p>

<p>This is a report on the Princeton on the Road information session held in Minneapolis, Minnesota on Monday 22 September 2008. I picked up my son from his dorm room at the University of Minnesota (where he is a dual-enrollment student for "eleventh grade") and drove the short distance to downtown Minneapolis. One great thing about downtown locations such as the big convention hotel where the Princeton meeting was held is that they have great public transportation (well, as good as public transportation gets in Minnesota), so that students without cars can get to the meetings by themselves. This meeting was more lightly attended than a Princeton information meeting I saw four years ago in a different conference room in a downtown Minneapolis hotel. The audience was ethnically diverse--"white," "black," and "Asian" students seemed to be there in about equal numbers--but dressed in rather upscale outfits for the most part. </p>

<p>There was a table of handouts just outside the door of the meeting room, and information cards to fill out. Admission officer Joe Ramirez said hello to people as they walked in. When he opened the meeting, he said he is from Omaha, Nebraska and is a class of '07 graduate of Princeton, who has worked in the admission office a year already. He first showed a four-minute video, produced in 2004 by a 2003 graduate of Princeton. The video showed a lot of campus scenes with quick cuts and had voice-overs from many students or recent alumni about what they liked about Princeton. The main thing that Princeton students said they liked about Princeton was the diversity of opportunities there and the other students. </p>

<p>Then Mr. Ramirez began his talk. He said the thing that makes Princeton different is the undergraduate experience. There is a strong emphasis on undergraduates at Princeton. Princeton has 4,850 undergraduate students and 2,295 graduate students, which is a rare ratio of undergraduate to graduate students at a research university. Princeton has a liberal arts tradition, but a strong engineering program. Most classes have less than twenty students [my son whispered, "just like my classes at the U of Minnesota"], so students can be engaged with the faculty, especially in their major courses. </p>

<p>There are typically ten courses for completing major requirements. It takes thirty-one courses to graduate from Princeton, so most students are taking most of their courses outside their major. Certificate programs are great; look for them on the Princeton website. </p>

<p>Independent research is required of all students at Princeton. You work one-on-one with members of the faculty. A student can choose the research topic for the senior thesis based on the student's interests. Examples of alumni with interesting senior thesis projects include Meg Whitman of eBay, Justice Samuel Alito of the United States Supreme Court, and Wendy Kopp, founder of Teach for America. And the senior thesis projects result from preparation earlier in Princeton undergraduate education. Junior papers are shorter papers that develop research and writing skills. There are seventy or more different freshman writing seminars which students can choose from. </p>

<p>Princeton has a study abroad office, and even better it has international internships. Would-be science students often ask, "Can I do research in a lab?" and Princeton's answer is that you HAVE TO do research in a lab as a Princeton science student. </p>

<p>A student asked: What makes the Woodrow Wilson School special? </p>

<p>A: You apply to this major in your sophomore year. Each year 90 students are accepted; recently 140 students applied. You work on a "task force" on a public policy issue. </p>

<p>Mr. Ramirez asked how many students attending the meeting were interested in later studying medicine, and quite a few raised their hands. He said Princeton has no professional schools, and it has no pre-med major. Princeton does have a pre-health career advising office. There are about 900 students registered with that office. </p>

<p>Student Q: What are the opportunities to study economics and business? </p>

<p>A: There is no business major at Princeton, but great opportunities for students interested in business. Business Today is a student group founded by Steve Forbes when he was a Princeton student. </p>

<p>Student Q: Can a Wilson School student take another major? </p>

<p>A: No, only one major is possible because of the senior thesis requirement, but a certificate is possible. </p>

<p>Student Q: Is there a pre-law program? </p>

<p>A: There is pre-law advising, but law school admission has even more flexibility than medical school, because there are no specific course requirements, so there is lots of flexibility in what you can study. </p>

<p>On student life, Mr. Ramirez said that there are four years of housing guaranteed for Princeton students. There are no theme houses or language houses or other specialty residences. There is diversity in each residence, but you can choose to live in a single room or in larger groups. Each residential college [undergraduate dorm] has its own personality, and each residential college's residents think that their college is best, which shows that they are all good. Eating clubs are clubs where students eat--you join those as a junior if you like. </p>

<p>Student Q: Are the dorms co-ed? </p>

<p>A: The rooms are of course single-sex, and there are a few single-sex wings in some dorms, but mostly they are all mixed-up. </p>

<p>Parent Q: How is placement into dorms done? </p>

<p>A: It's random, but students from the same states are mixed into several different dorms; mostly students of all kinds are mixed up into each dorm. </p>

<p>Student Q: Do many upperclassmen choose to stay in the residential colleges? </p>

<p>A: We have one year of experience with that, and surprisingly many stay. All upperclassmen can have some meals in their previous residential colleges, to maintain connections with those. </p>

<p>Student Q: How did it work for you when you applied? </p>

<p>A: I'll talk about the application process in a while. </p>

<p>The city of Princeton, New Jersey has 30,000 residents, in a suburban environment. Students are on campus for many activities, so there is lots of campus life. You can take advantage of New York City and Philadelphia also, as they are not too far away. </p>

<p>Business Today is the largest student publication in the country. The Business Today students fund-raise all over the country, and invite speakers to campus from many different businesses. </p>

<p>Princeton has received an alumni gift for a center for creative and performing arts. There are two orchestras on campus, and also a laptop orchestra, which has performed at Carnegie Hall. Most orchestra members are NOT music majors. </p>

<p>Mr. Ramirez said students ask "Are most Princeton students liberal or conservative?" He said there are both kinds of students, and they maintain dialog with one another. The Whig-Cliosophic Society runs intercollegiate debate programs. There are strong student groups for both Republicans and Democrats. One example of the campus culture of dialog is the freshman seminar co-taught by Robert George and Cornell West. They debate with each other as a few lucky freshman see both points of view in one seminar. </p>

<p>Mr. Ramirez asked if any students were interested in athletics, and a few raised their hands. Princeton has strong Division I athletics, and also club and intramural sports, including ultimate Frisbee. </p>

<p>Student Q: What is the most popular major? </p>

<p>A: Some popular majors are history, politics, English, and biology, and there are many smaller majors. </p>

<p>Parent Q: What about the club sports? </p>

<p>A: Some clubs compete against nearby colleges such as Rider, Rutgers, or Penn, and some compete nationally. </p>

<p>I asked about press coverage I had seen about a program to encourage students to take a year abroad. </p>

<p>Mr. Ramirez answered that the Bridge Year program is still in the works, and is intended for students who are interested in service abroad. The program will start with students who enter in fall of 2009 [students from high school class of 2009]. </p>

<p>There are lots of service opportunities through the Pace Center. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Why would someone from Minnesota want to go to Princeton? </p>

<p>A: For all the things I've talked about: the undergraduate focus, special speakers are open to undergraduates more than to graduate students. It's not for everyone, but it's a certain kind of experience. </p>

<p>Mr. Ramirez asked how many high school students in the room were seniors and how many younger, and it was about half and half. He then explained the admission process. </p>

<p>It's a holistic process. We ask, "How is Joe going to do academically?" What challenging courses have you taken? Take what interests and challenges you. There's not one kind of curriculum (AP, IB, college dual-enrollment) that is better or worse. </p>

<p>Applicants must submit the SAT or the ACT with writing, and three SAT Subject Tests. </p>

<p>Extracurricular activities are important. Be committed; how you made an impact in your community is important. We're thinking about what kind of community player you are. </p>

<p>Your essays should be well-written and thoughtful. It should reflect YOU as a person. Have someone look at it to see if it represents you as you are. </p>

<p>Three recommendation letters are required: one from a school counselor, and two from two teachers of different subjects--it doesn't matter exactly which subjects. Additional letters of recommendation are okay, as for example from a coach or from an employer. </p>

<p>Princeton also asks some fun questions, such as "What is your favorite book" or "What is your favorite website?"--NOT princeton.edu [which got laughs from the audience]. </p>

<p>Princeton also has an open-ended question: "What else would you like us to know?" Feel free to use that. </p>

<p>Most applicants apply with the Common Application with the Princeton supplement. There is also a Princeton application. You can apply on paper or online. If you apply online, we print out all the online forms, and read them from paper. </p>

<p>Princeton has NO early decision or early action. Everyone applies by the first of January, and receives a response by March. </p>

<p>Then alumnus Don Smalley '72 was invited forward to explain the alumni interviewing process. Mr. Smalley first asked if anyone in the room had ever met a Princeton alumnus before this meeting. I was one of the few people in the room to raise my hand. Mr. Smalley said that most applicants don't have a chance in their personal life to talk to someone who has been to Princeton. Princeton has an alumni interview process for that reason. </p>

<p>Mr. Smalley then asked, "Does anyone remember the movie Risky Business?" He gave a synopsis of the movie plot, and then said, "I've almost never had that kind of experience. But lots of interesting things do happen in interviews." You can find out about Princeton. It's also a chance for us to pass along information to Princeton that adds life to the file. </p>

<p>We're not out to gong anybody. We're trying to get nuggets of fact and detail and color that will come out in your favor. </p>

<p>There are hundreds of Princeton alumni in Minnesota, and about 90 to 100 of the Twin Cities alumni interview each year. </p>

<p>Alumni interviewers get contact information for the student, about as soon as the student first sends in any part of the application, but the interviewers do NOT get any admission file information. Sometimes we get clues from an email address. If I see an address like "<a href="mailto:likes2dance@gmail.com">likes2dance@gmail.com</a>," I might contact an alumnus I know who knows a lot about dancing and performing arts to do that interview. The interview report is not heavy on judgment, but passes on information. We try to give interview opportunities to everyone who applies. </p>

<p>Some students ask, "Why should we be interviewed by alumni in our town, and not by the admission officers in the admission office in Princeton?" The answer to that is that thousands of students visit the admission office during the admission season, when the admission officers are busy reading application files. The admission office can't offer interviews--it's too busy. </p>

<p>Mr. Ramirez said, "About 21,000 people applied last year; just about all of them were interviewed, from Nepal to St. Louis Park, Minnesota." </p>

<p>Mr. Ramirez remembered the earlier student question and said, "I was asked about how the process went for me. I'll be going to Nebraska briefly soon, and I'll look up my interviewer. I still go to see him when I'm back in Nebraska." Mr. Smalley also hears of students who keep contact with their alumni interviewers. </p>

<p>Financial aid application information goes directly to the financial aid office through its online forms. All they ask is what a family needs to be able to go to Princeton. All financial need will be met with grants and student jobs--there have been no loans in financial aid packages since 2001. Many Princeton students end up paying less than they would at their local state college. Princeton gives out more grants than it takes in in tuition payments. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Do applicants fill out the federal FAFSA form? </p>

<p>A: Eventually, to see which funding source provides what aid. </p>

<p>Study abroad is also covered by financial aid. Princeton students have the least debt in the country; that's the bottom line. Princeton may not have the most total dollars, but it has the most dollars per student of any college. Princeton families today pay less in real terms than they did ten years ago. </p>

<p>The financial aid form also has a "What else would you like us to know?" box that will take a few thousand characters of explanation of family special circumstances. International students get the same aid as domestic students; Princeton is very need-blind. </p>

<p>Student Q: What about outside scholarships? </p>

<p>A: That would go to the student first, so first the hours of the student job would be reduced, then maybe you'd get a computer. The expected family contribution will stay the same, because that is what the family is able to pay. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Did you say financial aid is guaranteed for all four years? </p>

<p>A: You reapply each year, to see if any circumstances have changed. </p>

<p>For a family with an income under $120,000, Princeton covers all tuition. For a family with an income under $70,000 to $80,000, Princeton covers everything. </p>

<p>Parent Q: What if the family has assets? </p>

<p>A: Your house or your retirement fund are not considered assets when calculating your financial need. </p>

<p>Parent Q: What if it's not in an official retirement fund, but it's an asset? </p>

<p>A: The financial aid office looks at that. </p>

<p>Student Q: Do students apply to a specific college at Princeton University? </p>

<p>A: All students apply to the university as a whole. Students switch majors. We admit students who are interested in engineering, and when it comes time to declare majors, half of them no longer study engineering. But just as many students decide to study engineering after not coming in thinking they would. </p>

<p>Parent Q: I hear there are no transfer admissions, but how many students transfer out? </p>

<p>A: Yes, there are no transfer admissions into Princeton. About 90 percent of the admitted students graduate in four years. It's about 96 percent in five or six years; so most students graduate together. </p>

<p>Parent Q: What percentage of students get the major they want? </p>

<p>A: All except some applicants to the Woodrow Wilson School. </p>

<p>Student Q: Is there a J[anuary] term? </p>

<p>A: Fall semester lasts until exams in January. [This evoked a groan from a parent who is an alumnus of another college with that kind of schedule.] </p>

<p>Student Q: How do students get their academic advisers? </p>

<p>A: At first they are in the residential colleges, usually by major interest. Once you declare a major, you have a department adviser. </p>

<p>After the main session adjourned, I stayed around to listen to some individual questions, and had a chance to individually congratulate Mr. Ramirez for Princeton's bold stand in eliminating its early decision program. </p>

<p>My son later commented that the meeting was "generic," but it was informative and attended by people who mostly asked well-informed questions. We are still thinking about how Princeton compares to some other universities he is thinking of applying to. We appreciated Mr. Ramirez and Mr. Smalley taking the time to let people in our town know more about Princeton.</p>

<p>This is a report on the Sunday 28 September 2008 college information session ("admissions reception") by Washington University in St. Louis (usually spoken as "Wash. U.," usually abbreviated as "WUSTL") in Bloomington, Minnesota. My wife, son, and I attended this event together. This was the first time any of us had seen an information session by WUSTL. I referred to my own notes and my wife's notes in writing up this report. My son has been getting email and postal mail from WUSTL since last school year, presumably because he took the PSAT as a sophomore. I know some alumni of WUSTL, and my mom has a good impression of WUSTL after studying nursing in St. Louis decades ago and doing a rotation at the children's hospital affiliated with WUSTL. </p>

<p>The admissions reception was held in a hotel conference room in a suburban Marriott hotel near a beltway superhighway and the Twin Cities airport, and reasonably near to bus and light rail lines. (I'm not sure what Sunday afternoon schedule there is for public transportation to that location.) There was a table outside the conference room with WUSTL literature such as a WUSTL brochure and a card about campus visits, as well as sign-up sheets for students attending the meeting. There appeared to be students from quite a broad geographic area around the Twin Cities attending the meeting. </p>

<p>We found seats inside before the meeting started. Senior Assistant Director of Admissions Scott Crawford was checking his equipment for the video presentation, and he politely asked us in the audience, "Is it too dark in here for anyone?" I looked at my note paper, saw that I could see it just fine, and was about to say so when he joked, "I look better in dim lighting," at which several of us smiled. Soda pop was available for refreshments, as my son noted, and he had a Mountain Dew. </p>

<p>Mr. Crawford opened the meeting by saying he had a ten-minute video he would save till the end. He said he had visited about a dozen high schools in Minnesota already that week, and would visit a few more after the information session. "When we're done visiting high schools, we like to sit and read files during the admission season." </p>

<p>He asked for a show of hands of how many students were juniors and how many seniors, and it was about half of each. He asked how many seniors had filled out the Pre-Application Data Sheet/Supplement (WUSTL's supplement to the Common Application or Universal College Application) and a few already had. He mentioned that WUSTL is structured into five undergraduate divisions: arts & sciences, engineering, business, art, and architecture. Because WUSTL is a liberal arts institution, all students take courses from the College of Arts & Sciences. All students, in whatever division, can take courses from all areas. </p>

<p>There are more than 200 student organizations at WUSTL. There is a wonderful advising system at WUSTL. </p>

<p>The WUSTL campus is square in the middle of the St. Louis metropolitan area. It's about seven miles from downtown St. Louis and one-and-a-half miles from Clayton, a secondary downtown. There are business and residential areas near the campus, and the campus is well defined. The campus is 130 acres, with 40 acres in the South Forty, where most of the dormitories are. About 75 percent of students live on campus. Housing is guaranteed for all four years and freshmen are required to live on campus. </p>

<p>Extracurricular activities include athletics and other activities. There are twenty varsity sports and forty club or intramural sports; varsity sports are NCAA Division III. WUSTL is the site of the 2008 vice-presidential debate. There is a free bus pass for WUSTL students for St. Louis public transportation, and there is a light rail line from the campus to the airport. About two-thirds of students participate in community service activities. And about two-thirds are in performing arts activities; there is no need to be a performing arts major or minor to participate in those activities. WUSTL encourages students to get involved in different activities at the level you are comfortable with. </p>

<p>WUSTL allows students to explore different areas of academic study. About 90 percent of students graduate in four years. More than 3500 students are in arts & sciences. At least 60 percent of students do more than major in just one subject. In engineering, there are majors in biomedical engineering and other engineering majors, and higher than the national percentage of female engineering students. The business division includes a center for entrepreneurship. At least 40 percent of the business curriculum is classes from outside the business division. Students choose their majors at the end of sophomore year. </p>

<p>There are many programs for study abroad at WUSTL. Study abroad programs include both research opportunities and internships. There is also an office of undergraduate research. Interaction with faculty is important at WUSTL. One adviser that all undergraduates get is a career center adviser. There is career practice all four years. There are several pre-freshman summer programs. </p>

<p>All freshmen taking Writing 1. This is also an orientation to academic support; it is capped at twelve students per section. Interdisciplinary programs and freshman seminars are available in all divisions. A class size of seventeen or eighteen is the average undergraduate class size, with 85 percent of classes being twenty students or fewer, and 50 percent ten students or fewer. There are large lecture classes with up to 150 students. </p>

<p>WUSTL asks high school seniors to choose one division, to get a taste of course work you would like as a freshman. But you can always change; fifty students changed during summer 2008 after admission. </p>

<p>Merit scholarships are divided into areas corresponding to divisions. Mr. Crawford said, "Every student I talked to who got a merit scholarship didn't expect to get one, so please fill out the academic scholarship application." </p>

<p>About 60 percent of students get need-based financial aid. The budget for that was $60 million last year and will be $65 million this year. WUSTL doesn't want finances to be an obstacle to any admitted student. Call or email the financial aid office; get to know the people in the office. </p>

<p>As for admissions information, the early decision program is a binding agreement. The deadline is November 15th, and you will know the result by December 15th. WUSTL should be your main choice if you are applying ED. OF COURSE apply regular decision to other colleges to keep your options open. ED is not for you if choose colleges based on merit scholarship awards; WUSTL awards those in one pool. Recent admission rates have been 20 percent of applicants in the RD round and 30 percent of applicants in the ED round because the pool of applicants is stronger. </p>

<p>What WUSTL looks for is </p>

<p>I. Academic Strength </p>

<p>Every student is serious about academics, but every student feels free to explore academic interests. WUSTL is NOT focused on class rank and G.P.A. WUSTL looks at the transcript and the profile of the high school. Admission officers travel to know the schools. The question the admission committee asks is "Does your course work make sense for transition to college courses in your area of interest?" For standardized tests, WUSTL accepts either the SAT or ACT, one of which is required; SAT Subject Tests are not required, but the admission office will look at those you take. WUSTL records the best scores you achieve on each test section and gives you a new composite score. </p>

<p>II. Good Community Members </p>

<p>WUSTL looks for good people as well as good students. Recommendations are required from teachers and from the high school counselor. WUSTL wants a well-rounded COMMUNITY; but if you are committed to one thing, tell the committee about that. You need to have time-management skills, so tell the committee about those.</p>

<p>Be genuine. Be yourself. What impresses us? When students are genuine. </p>

<p>Mr. Crawford then played the video he mentioned earlier. It included a lot of quick cuts showing campus scenes, and various students spoke on camera, with identification of their home towns, which were all over. The students particularly mentioned lots of interaction with faculty and plenty of research internships. One girl mentioned that she was going to work for Goldman Sachs after graduation, at which most of the audience laughed, because of recent news, but I actually thought that was good news, because that firm is surviving the current financial downturn better than most. </p>

<p>Mr. Crawford then opened the meeting to questions. </p>

<p>Parent Question: When there is a financial aid award letter, will the financial aid office speak about that to parents? Is there a privacy issue? </p>

<p>A: The primary interaction about financial aid is with parents. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Is there a combined undergraduate-M.D. program? </p>

<p>A: The University Scholars program has combined undergraduate-postgraduate degree programs in medicine, law, or business. The vast majority of students don't use those programs, but if you are sure now that's what you want to do, you can apply and then all you need to do to get into medical school is maintain your G.P.A. and get a certain score on the MCAT. </p>

<p>Parent Q: When is a good time to visit? </p>

<p>A: At your convenience. The majority of the year WUSTL has Saturday information sessions and tours. Of course during the school year you can visit classes. </p>

<p>Parent Q: When looking at a high school transcript, do you consider weighted or unweighted grades? </p>

<p>A: That's why admission officers visit high schools, to understand the transcripts better. WUSTL reads admission files by region. More than one admission officer reads each application, and the territorial reader is the first reader of the file. </p>

<p>Parent Q: What is the admission rate? What is the yield? </p>

<p>A: There is about a 20 percent admission rate; of 4,000 students admitted, there are 1,400 in the entering class. </p>

<p>Only 10 percent of the students are from Missouri. Most are from more than 500 miles away. Between 95 and 98 percent continue on to sophomore year. </p>

<p>Parent Q: How do we know that you know about a particular high school? </p>

<p>A: We get on the phone or email the high schools; we want to make a fair decision. </p>

<p>Student Q: Are undergraduate research projects chosen by the students or by the professors? </p>

<p>A: You can create your own project, or you can pop on board a professor's project. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Applicants don't need SAT II tests? </p>

<p>A: We look at whatever is submitted. </p>

<p>Parent Q: But you don't require Subject Tests? </p>

<p>A: We don't require any. </p>

<p>Student Q: How is Greek life on campus? </p>

<p>A: About 20 percent of students are involved; it's there but not overwhelming. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Of students who graduate, how many get jobs? </p>

<p>A: Among the students who take advantage of internships and advisers, about two-thirds go to the workplace, and about one-third go to postgraduate school. The Career Center and other resources are there for all students. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Are there full-need financial aid awards for students from middle-class incomes under $100,000, like at some highly endowed institutions? </p>

<p>A: The first change in our policies this year is that loans were replaced by grants for all students with a family income less than $60,000. These criteria are changing; all schools are evaluating such policies year by year. </p>

<p>From the same parent: Do awards continue after the first year? </p>

<p>A: Absolutely. I forgot to mention that if you change your division, you keep your scholarship if you do well. We support students to help them keep their grades up. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Is there financial aid for study abroad? </p>

<p>A: Yes. </p>

<p>Student Q: Do you accept credit for AP, IB, or College in the Schools study during high school? </p>

<p>A: This depends on the division. Usually an AP score of 4 or 5, or an IB score of 6 or 7, can get some credit. Previous college-level courses can get credit or advanced placement. </p>

<p>Parent Q: Is the environment competitive or collaborative? </p>

<p>A: It's collaborative, because there is advising on the many opportunities at WUSTL. </p>

<p>After the general Q and A, Mr. Crawford noted that the announced time of the meeting was over, but he was happy to stay and answer further individual questions. I saw quite a large group of parents and students move to the front of the room to ask more questions, as I left to go to another meeting. </p>

<p>Since this meeting, my son has begun receiving the WUSTL Washington World newsletter by postal mail to our home. We'll keep WUSTL in mind as my son refines his application list for next year (fall 2009).</p>