Yeah, in theory that should be a secondary concern . . . but in reality, it's important! It's just one more reason why a senior should narrow his focus to a couple schools rathre than use the "shotgun approach" and send applications everywhere!
If money is a serious concern (not just a matter of "I don't want to spend it"), you can see your guidance counselor for a free application voucher. They don't have an unlimited number of these, so I wouldn't expect to be able to apply to more than 1-2 schools without charge. Also, we have a free application week (is it October? November?) when many schools allow students to send in applications for free, though it's a little bit late in the year, and I personally would go ahead and pay for the earliest deadlines.
What are the chances of her making a real living out of dance? I know she loves dance but does she have what it takes do make a living at it. If yes, find a dance major if maybe, find a school where she can still take dance but get a degree in something that will allow her to be employed when she graduates and she can dance on the side.
I was thinking the same thing. Dance is a long shot career.
Long story short, she LOVED Augustana and ended up hating U of I. The atmosphere at a small school was so much more welcoming. The people were really nice, the campus was beautiful, and she just had a good feeling about it. When we visited U of I it was cold, impersonal, and she didn't like the fact that she would never really know her teachers, and would probably have 300 kids in some of her classes. Some people thrive at big schools, but she was smart enough to realize she wasn't one of them.
Yeah, I've heard LOADS of similar stories from my students! Sometimes it's the other way around: I was sure I wanted to go to a small school, until I visited ____. Or, I was set on ____, where my whole family has gone, but I hated it and only stayed a semester. Or, I wanted to go out of state to get far-far from home, but then I couldn't even afford to come home for Thanksgiving, so I transferred after freshman year. I've heard loads of variations, and the theme is usually that the student didn't really know what he wanted. Seniors aren't experienced with making decisions like this, and they often base them on superficial items like where the high school boyfriend's going, the size of the dorm rooms, the proximity to skiing or the beach. Often they make these assumptions based upon this or that little detail they've heard somewhere. They need guidance.
My oldest wants to go to a large school, and she has the right personality for it. She's very self-motivated and confident, and she wants the wider variety of options that'll be available at a large school. My youngest would be overwhelmed at a large school; she'll end up at a small or medium-sized school.
One more thing to consider: If you expect that your child'll be doing a professional internship of any type during college, try to think ahead for those plans when you're choosing a college. For example, my oldest is going into nursing. When we visit colleges, I want to check out the hospitals at which she'd be doing student nursing -- the distance, etc. Ditto for student teaching; consider where the college places student teachers. My engineer husband works in for a research company near a large university, and they regularly hire interns from the college (they work a semester /go to school a semester, which prolongs graduation but gives them a decent paycheck for 1/2 the school year and real work experience); so an engineering student would do well to choose a college in an industry-filled city rather than somewhere remote.
Not sure, but when I asked her last year if he should take it she said no that it was only for people looking to get scholarship money. She is one of the worst counselors I've ever dealt with.
Unless things are
very different in your area, I think this is horrible advice.
I know what you mean, DS is dead set on going into construction (seriously in this economy) and I keep saying keep an open mind and don't be so dead set on one major. So unless he picks a back up it only schools with construction programs.
Yeah, this is a good example of why kids need guidance. The pervasive "you can be anything you want to be" and the quite-often-a-lie "do what you love, and you'll never work a day in your life" is sunk deeply into their brains. Many students have the idea that if they're the best (and they ALL think they're the best), they'll be employable in THE JOB. Most of my students are completely convinced that they and their friends will
outperform our generation in the work force. They think that they're smarter, more technical, better at multi-tasking . . . and they think these traits will skyrocket them straight to the top. While you and I know plenty of adults who are searching fruitlessly for work, our teenagers have an idea that these people must not be trying, or they must not be all that well qualified. They lack the worldly experience to know any better.
Here's an example: My niece (a junior, like my own daughter) wants to major in music with the goal of being a high school band director. Living near a major university, we get LOTS of student teachers, and we
almost always have a student teacher in band. Kids LOVE that program, but our band director has been here since the school opened. I don't think a single one of his student teachers has been hired to teach band. Anywhere. The jobs just don't exist. Think about it realistically: How many high school English teachers are in this county? I'd guess around 200. Ditto for science and history. We can never get enough math and world language teachers. Same for special ed. But how many band directors are in this county? Between all the high schools AND the middle schools, I think it's EIGHT. So someone has to retire or die . . . AND you have to be better than all those other people who are qualified to be a high school band director. I understand wanting the job, but the vast majority of the people who want that job are going to be disappointed. My SIL has asked me to try to convince her to double major in something practical AND music, the idea being that she could support herself WHILE hoping for that dream job to come along.
I could tell a similar story about my daughter, who wants to be a comic book artist but has only mediocre talent and no cut-throat personality appropriate for the business end of editing/publishing. I'm trying to help her see the difference between a hobby and a career. Also, I'm trying to get her to see that her choices aren't no-art-ever OR work-as-an-artist. I don't want her to end up like a friend of mine, for whom NOTHING BUT a degree in fashion design would do -- she was going to work in New York drawing sketches, putting together fashion shows -- and in the 15 years since she graduated, she's given up on ever finding a use for that degree. She works in insurance. I think it used to bother her, but now she's drawn a big line between her job and her personal life, and she has quite worrying over it.