Posted in Financial Aid/Scholarships

Cutting The Cost of College

I trust that you had a great Christmas and wish you a Happy 2018! I am not sure if you are one to make New Year’s resolutions, but I have one for you just in case you are.  How about not paying as much for college as you should pay? I am going to treat this post as a teaser for my College Planning Night on Tuesday, January 16th at 7:00pm in the DeMoss Auditorium.  If you are reading this but your child does not attend DC, you are also welcome to attend this College Planning Night presentation.  The title of the presentation will be just what the title of this post says, “Cutting The Cost of College”.  I am not going to talk about the FAFSA or where to find scholarships even though these two things are very important to paying less for college.  In the beginning of October I hosted a Financial Aid Information Night and this information is what was talked about.  What I am going to present on at the College Planning Night are the many areas that you may not have considered that factors into paying less for college.

  1. Location
  2. Type of School (Public, Private, Large, Small, Christian, Art School, etc.)
  3. Pre-college opportunities (CLEP, AP, Dual Credit, Online courses, et.)
  4. Talent (Music, Art, Drama, Dance, Athletic, etc.)
  5. Work Colleges, Honors Colleges, Special Programs, Bridge Programs
  6. Importance of major
  7. Importance of diversity (factors out of our control)
  8. Opportunities while at college (on-campus job, ROTC, Residence Assistant, etc.)
  9.  Importance of interest and when you apply
  10. Community College and other 2-year colleges
  11. Patience
  12. Having the proper perspective

I will be going into more detail at the College Planning Meeting on Jan. 16th on each of these factors and how they may be able to cut your cost of college.  Below are two non-negotiables when it comes to cutting the cost of college:

Test Scores– Each year I see a number of juniors and seniors not take the SAT and ACT as seriously as they should.  I hear phrases like, “I don’t have time to prepare with all of the other things I am doing”, “I have other school work to do that takes up my time” , “I just didn’t prep for it”, etc.  Now, I know that we have busy schedules and a number of students do commit their time to a number of extracurricular activities, but they should not have an excuse to preparing as much as they possibly can for the SAT or ACT because their scores on these tests are a very important factor on whether they may earn merit-based scholarship money from a college.  You can get strategic about location, size, competitiveness of admissions, etc., but if your score(s) are not where the college needs them to be to offer merit based scholarship money, you are out of luck.  These standardized tests need to be taken as seriously as your math or English class.

Deadlines- Every year I work with seniors who are completing applications on October 31st so they can submit it right before the deadline on November 1st.  Every year I have a handful of seniors who didn’t apply by the deadline they were supposed to and now they can’t be eligible for scholarship money from that school or if it’s the regular decision deadline, they can’t be considered for admission at all.  You should always make your deadline to apply to a college a week before the actual deadline.  This gives you time to take care of any unforeseen issues that arise that always pop up when you least expect them to.  I hear the excuses like, “I didn’t decide to apply until last night”, “I have so much other work to do”, etc., but if you manage your time well and plan ahead, you should not need to use these excuses.  Here is a quote from a college admissions counselor about missing deadlines:

“Students may have lost an opportunity for huge scholarships that are offered at the university they applied to. This could be a $40,000 mistake at some universities,”

This also applies to deadlines for scholarships.  These can be separate and are typically earlier than the application deadlines.  Also, colleges are clear to communicate that to be considered for merit based scholarships, you must apply by a certain date which can be different than their actual application deadlines.

Posted in College Admissions

What is a Good GPA?

This is a question I am asked a lot each year.  It’s an important question because a student’s high school GPA is the most important factor when it comes to being admitted to a college.  A student’s GPA is a culmination of their hard work in the classroom over 3 years. I say this because  for college admissions, the grades earned in 9th-11th grade are what colleges guarantee they will evaluate.  Mid-semester senior year grades are also very important but whether a college evaluates these grades for admission depends on the college, when the student has applied, and/or how the student has performed academically.

I can also understand the questions about a good GPA because here at DC we utilize a weighted 5.0 GPA. There are many different grading scales and ways that high schools calculate GPA.  What is most important to colleges is that we are clear in communicating how we calculate our GPA because students are only evaluated in the context of their high school.  Students here at DC are not compared to students from another school that has a different grading scale.

What is an average GPA?  

The National Average GPA is typically around a 3.0 (unweighted).  When comparing that to our 5.0 grading scale here at DC, this would be around a 3.6 (weighted on a 5.0 scale).  The average GPA here at DC from year to year ranges between a 3.7-3.9.  Both a 3.0 on an unweighted scale and a 3.7 on a 5.0 weighted scale is a B average.

A student with a 3.8-4.0 (unweighted) GPA or a 4.5-4.9 (5.0 weighted) GPA is typically expected to be admitted to colleges who have a 25% or less admission rate.  However, this is only 5% of the four year colleges in the country.  The majority of colleges in the United States have a 50% admissions rate or higher.  Something that gets overlooked is that there are great colleges that have over a 50% admission rate.  To be accepted to a school that has over a 50% admission rate, you could have a weighted GPA in the 3.0 range.  However, there are still options for students whose weighted GPA is in the 2.0 range but they are fewer.  The concrete numbers are less important than your individual experience and the details of how you earned your GPA, which I will discuss below.

Determining a good GPA is based primarily on three different factors.

1. Your School Overall

Each year, we update our school profile which we send to colleges with senior transcripts. This profile provides each college with all of the academic information it needs to evaluate a senior from DC in the context of what we do.  This information includes the honors and AP courses we offer, graduation requirements, grading scale, SAT and ACT scores, AP scores, information about electives, SAIL, colleges that our students have been accepted to over the last 5 years and more.  You can click on the link above to view the 2017-2018 school profile.

Two students who have similar GPAs could be evaluated differently because one student has taken mostly honors and AP classes and the other has taken mostly college prep level classes.  Colleges will consider the student who takes higher level classes to be more qualified. Even though both students are earning As, one is earning them in more rigorous classes.

When using a weighted GPA, it may mean the student taking more rigorous classes is earning Bs and the student in the college prep level classes is earning As.  In this situation, colleges will still look more favorably on the student in higher level classes who is willing to take on a more rigorous course load.  The point is that a better GPA doesn’t necessarily mean a higher one; you should challenge yourself with your coursework first and foremost.  Don’t drop down a level in a course so you can get a A.  This won’t fool colleges into thinking you’re a more qualified applicant.

2. Success and Your Classes

What is success?  This is a very tricky question.  Ultimately, success is utilizing the gifts, abilities and resources you have been given by God to bring glory to Him and lead others to know Him more.  We grow up thinking that success is being the best, getting everything right, “checking off all of the boxes”, going to a “good” college, getting a good job and making a lot of money. This may be how the world views success and if we do achieve these things we may consider ourselves more “successful”.  It’s difficult to separate our intentions from this worldly view of success.  Nevertheless, as believers in Jesus Christ, we have to.  God made each of us unique with different gifts and talents.  We need to utilize these gifts and talents in all of the various ways that we can.  Alex Chediak says that “vocation equals passions plus gifts”.  As believers, it’s our responsibility to put in 100% effort as well as use the natural gifts we have been given.  If we do this, God will provide opportunities for us to succeed in a vocational area He has prepared for us.

How does this view of success impact the classes I take? First, you should be putting in 100% effort.  Just understanding this and showing teachers that you are willing to work hard through adversity will open up more opportunities to take more challenging classes. If you do not do this then you will miss out on opportunities to take more challenging classes.  One phrase I really struggle with when I hear it is, “they haven’t worked hard up to this point but they have a lot of potential”.  As you approach your junior and senior year of high school, if you haven’t worked hard, you do not deserve to be in the more rigorous classes.

You should be taking the appropriate level classes in high school that match your natural giftedness. As students get to their junior year in high school, it becomes more clear that students are more English/History or Math/Science students.  This is a natural separation.  Now, there are a handful of students that excel in all four (or five if you add World Language) but this is rare.  Take the classes that you know you have a natural giftedness for and if you put in 100% effort, you should be able to get a B in the class.  You do not want to kill yourself with stress, but if there’s a subject you’re really interested in or think you might want to pursue as a major in college, try and push yourself to take the higher level class. Even if it brings your GPA down a bit, it will demonstrate that you’re a driven student who is willing to take risks to gain a better understanding of the subject.  Taking  progressively more challenging classes throughout high school, even if it doesn’t raise your GPA, makes your GPA “better” in the eyes of admission officers because it is hard-earned.

3. Your Goals for College

Do you want to attend a Christian College? Do you want to attend a larger state university? Do you want to attend a smaller private college? Do you want to attend an Ivy League school? These are all good questions that need to be answered because the GPA you may need to have for each of these will be different.

What are you looking to pursue as a major?  If it is specific to math and science or the humanities then this could play a factor in how they evaluate your GPA because they may be looking more specifically at how much you challenge yourself in specific classes that pertain to that major.

You will need to take a look at the average GPA for incoming freshmen at your colleges of choice to get a sense of where you need to be.  You should also use tools like the Scattergram feature in Naviance which shows you the GPAs of other students who applied to these schools from DC and whether they were accepted or not.  Other important numbers to consider as well are the overall admission rate, whether you are applying early decision or early action and what your SAT or ACT scores are because each of these factors could have an impact on how closely they will consider your GPA.

Conclusion

In the end, what is expected of us is our best.  Sometimes our best doesn’t get us an A in a class (or even a B) and that is okay! How did you respond? Did you grow and mature through a difficult time? These are also very important lessons that will greatly benefit us as we get older and face more adversity.  Your GPA doesn’t define you! It is just a number that is evidence of your hard work over the course of four years (four more if you count college) of your life.  I don’t want to belittle its importance at all because it is still a number that colleges will evaluate closely, but it is not the only thing colleges will see.  If you work hard, put in 100% effort, respond well to adversity, seek the advice of wise counsel (teachers, parents, coaches, etc.), serve others, stay involved in activities outside of school that you have a giftedness in and strive to grow closer to God, He has a great plan for your life and he will make it apparent in His time.