DS 18 made up his mind at age 10 he was going to go to school where his summer camp was held-he ended up going elsewhere but it was his number 2 choice.
Yep, we're talking about exactly the same thing: He may not've ended up choosing that school, but attending band camp put it on his "investigate this school" list. And I'd bet a bunch of other kids who attended similar camps at least gave this school a good look because of that summer experience.
My theory: As my oldest daughter and I've become serious about the college search process, I've realized that she and her friends really don't have a clue about what college is like. About a year ago we had a long, serious talk -- which included my student teacher -- about college. They knew her, liked her, and felt comfortable peppering her with questions that they wouldn't necessarily ask strangers at an Open House. I was surprised at just what they didn't know. The whole college concept was very . . . abstract to them. Anyway, I think that schools where they've attended summer camps (or similar) seem "more real" to them . . . and, thus, very attractive. Known vs. unknown.
I don't remember college being particularly "unknown" to me, but my mother went back to college when I was in high school, and I'd tagged along with her to classes occasionally. I'd gone with her to the library on weekends. I'd spent more time on a campus than the average kid. Now, in retrospect, I see that she didn't do that just for the pleasure of my company -- it was good for me.
This makes me remember something: When we were finishing up our freshman year, my roommate and I were discussing our successes and failures over the course of the year, and she said something that struck me as so funny that I still remember it. She said that college was nothing like she'd expected. She said that she'd thought all we'd ever do was sit on blankets under trees studying, and we never did that -- not even once. She even showed me the blanket (still brand-new) that she'd bought special as our under-tree blanket. She clearly didn't come to college with a clear, realistic vision!
She was assigned to the dorm of 2 freshman girls . . . back to the dorm and had boys over . . . took her out until 3am . . . skipped all the next days activities . . . showed no interest in attending the football game . . . the hosts didn't want to go . . .
1. I suspect hosts like this are the reason we don't see more overnight invitations. I agree with you that I wouldn't have knowingly allowed a high school student to attend this weekend. Sure, a freshman could end up in similar situations, but a freshman would have her own room to which she could return and an RA and friends to whom she could turn -- a freshman would have a support system; your high school visitor had just her hosts.
2. I wonder how they pick the hosts -- I'm wondering if they use groups like kids who live in the honors dorms or teaching fellows? It would seem that they should've picked kids who would've wanted to attend the events and be more helpful to the potential students.
I hope you (and/or your daughter) had a chance to evaluate the overnight. The school really should know that their carefully laid plans were waylaid.