Posts Tagged ‘College Applications’

Friday Success Story: Goals For College

Friday, January 8th, 2010

My book on teaching organization to boys was released on Tuesday (visit www.thatcrumpledpaper.com for more info) and one of the questions I often receive is “Does Green Ivy work with girls?” Of course we do! And one of my favorite success stories is a young lady who called me on Monday to give me some GREAT news!

I worked with this young woman on a pro-bono basis for two years after we met at a Boys and Girls Club event in San Francisco. Over the course of two years, J. always found a way to get to my office, and managed to improve her grades and get good SAT scores despite some pretty big obstacles – she was supposed to be in the foster care system but had slipped through the cracks and spent the last two years of high school staying with her sister and her sister’s four-year-old twins. J. would get up at 5:30 to take three buses to get to school on time, and worked twenty hours a week to help out with the bills. Despite all those challenges, she is an incredibly positive, funny and charming young lady.

Last Christmas Eve, I surprised J. and picked her up and took her to Stacks in Menlo Park for breakfast before doing a little Christmas shopping. She was stressed about  finishing her college applications and wondering how she would even pay for college. Her sister that she was living with was also unemployed and a single parent. I took a piece of paper (actually an old receipt) out of my pocket and had her write down her goals – which were 1. Get into college 2. Find a way to pay for college and 3. Have my sister get a job.

By April of that next year, J. had gotten into EVERY COLLEGE SHE APPLIED TO (all nine!) and gotten so many scholarships – that she managed pretty much a full-ride to her first choice school. And, her sister found a job!

Her first semester in college was rocky, but mid-way through she started to make friends… as well as organize herself and manage her time better (she was taking six classes AND working twenty hours a week). This past Monday, she called me to tell me the GREAT news  -  she received a 3.0 GPA her first semester!!

She came by my office yesterday, and I could instantly tell that her confidence had risen to new heights and that she now believed that college was where she belonged. More than the grades, I could tell she had started to believe in her own ability to succeed – which is priceless.

College Corner – Deadlines Are Closer than They Appear

Friday, January 1st, 2010

This week, the NY Times published this piece on a University of Chicago Dean of Admissions who sent out a successful college essay to other applicants. Some students and adults complained about the sultry tone of the essay, but mostly, I think kids found that reading others essays so close to the deadline left them second-guessing their own abilities.

As deadlines loom (and there are still quite a few schools whose applications are due in the next few days!) students sometimes find themselves doubting themselves or feeling overwhelmed when they read the work of others. After all, most people on a tight deadline would second-guess themselves as it is, and teenagers probably fare far worse.

My advice to my students is generally to start early (in the early fall), come up with a several potential topics, and then read a few sample essays from a book like Edward Fiske’s Real College Essays That Work. I like Fiske’s book because students tend to find the essays approachable and real.

Some of the best essays I’ve read have been on seemingly small, slice-of-life or moment-in-time pieces – a conversation at a Day Worker’s Center, thoughts on driving one’s sister to ballet class and the challenges of listening to a tone-deaf brother play the drums. I can’t say there is no wrong topic, but there are many more right ones than students (and parents) tend to realize.