<p>We just got a letter from guidance about how to register for Naviance, Family Connection. They want us to fill out the graduation survey on there. No where in the letter does this state what it's for, why I should bother doing this, or how the data is used or protected.</p>
<p>Since I've heard it talked about on here I thought maybe someone would have an explanation.</p>
<p>Its most useful feature is that it graphs past admissions outcomes for each college, which gives students an idea of how their numbers compare to those of past acceptees from their high school. I attend a very small school where students tend to apply to Brown and Stanford but not Dartmouth, so in my case this graph wasn't very telling, but here</a> is a screen cap anyway.</p>
<p>Naviance is only as useful and your school makes it. Some schools are too small to effectively post data and other schools don't train well on it and use it poorly for that reason. As you said........how secure and what will it help you with? Ask questions.</p>
<p>again it is a factor of the depth of the data base. At what census the data points aren't entered. One student, two students..........each school decides for themselves.</p>
<p>As far as I know, the university counselors at my school enter everyone into the database. I didn't realize that might not be the case everywhere.</p>
<p>This high school has always tracked this information on paper in the past. Of course, it's spotty (especially because it's an all-boys school, and let's just say handing in information like that is pretty low on their priority list, lol), but it has been somewhat interesting (or depressing) to those of us who bother to look at it.</p>
<p>Anyway, my doubts have to do with this being on line. Seems like a lot of personal information to entrust to a "service" - or am I just paranoid?</p>
<p>P.S. I did email guidance. I bet you $100 I'm the only parent who did. (But then again, I'll bet most of them threw the letter away.)</p>
<p>My daughter is a home schooler and I made up my own chart using composite SAT and Subject Tests for the variables. My data? The previous year's ED thread from College Confidential. There were 40 admits and 47 deferred, not counting URMs, legacies, and athletic recruits. We could immediately see that see was a likely admit. 14 of 17 applicants in her scores ranges were admitted the previous year. She was too.</p>
<p>I found Naviance pretty useful, and we only list the number applied, accepted and enrolled at each college. But I don't think there is any breakout of ED vs RD applications. That would be useful.</p>
<p>Naviance is a great tool, but has to be interpreted carefully imo. If a kid applies to 15 schools, and tells their GC of the 1 school that he decided to go to, and does not bother to tell her that he got into all 15 schools, I'm not sure how that missing information reflects on the graph. If enough kids did that, it could make those schools seem harder to get into than they actually are?</p>
<p>If your school has a lot of info entered, it can be fun to see where you and your school mates fit in on a college's graph of acceptances from your school. It gives sort of an idea of what your chances are. Counselor has to input your GPA and SAT. If you and the counselor keep it up to date, Naviance tracks applications sent, transcripts, etc. Can be a useful tool. Has an easy college search feature.</p>
<p>It can also be used as an email server by counselors - to send out group emails about college information. In our school the counselors do this - as well as sending other things through edline and the school server - gets very confusing to have to be on so many lists but you don't want to miss any information.</p>
<p>
[quote]
But I don't think there is any breakout of ED vs RD applications. That would be useful.
[/quote]
Our version shows how many were waitlisted or deferred (blue diamonds) and then of that group which ones were rejected or accepted (diamonds are changed to red or green). However I don't think there was a symbol for accepted early. I'd guess if you asked they could easily make a symbol for the EA and ED admits.</p>
<p>Although a useful tool to a degree, it is not very accurate at my kids' large public HS. There is missing or just plain incorrect data entered frequently. The one kid who went to Harvard a few years ago isn't even on the Harvard graph, and I know my dd's info isn't accurate on the graphs of the colleges she applied to a year ago.
So use with caution.</p>
<p>Our school....a small private prep school....wouldn't use graphs, etc... in areas where only 1 or 2 students applied for privacy purposes. It would just state that there wasn't enough data to provide info.</p>
<p>That way when only 1 person applied to a certain ivy from our class, we all wouldn't know if they were denied, waitlisted, etc...</p>