I can go you one better. One of DD's options is within 20 minutes of the sister of a dear friend, who is a nurse. I've said several times if that's where she winds up I can rest easy because she'll be in far better hands than mine. That really is a comforting thought when you think about a true emergency situation.
Excellent!! One thing that was really attractive to DD about the college we visited Friday, besides the new sushi bar on campus

. was the hosptial on campus-not only because she is leaning toward medicine right now but with all the medical stuff she has been going through these past 6 months, it was peace of mind knowing it was "right' there if she needed.
[QUOTE="Got Disney";42432393]DS and I have done so much research on Colleges that our heads were about to pop

Even hired him an academic advisor....knowing what he wants to do and where he wants to go there is still tons of stuff to do.
Can't see leaving a 17 yo all alone to do that.....or to make such a hard choice....
There are Grades, scholarships,SATs,ACTs,Subject tests, AP tests, Volunteer hrs, Essays, financial aid, schools best for what you want to do, hrs and hrs of research, and getting everything in on time when they finally figure out their top 5-10 choices to apply... and on and on....
I can tell you my head was and is spinning so can't imagine his...for 4 years he has been working towards this....when I went to college grades were the main priority....
Know your child to get into a good school has to be super human....
Leadership skills, at least 200 volunteer hrs, GPA of at least 3.7, and if weighted at that even better, above average SAT/ACT scores, work experience, high score on SAT subject tests, and more...
Sure you can get into college with less but the midrange colleges look for these students first than go down from there.
They say sure you have a great GPA and SAT ACT scores....you have done great with volunteer hrs and took AP and Honors classes....but so have the other 20,000 who applied...so why are you so different....
That is where having a great essay comes in....
Nope....not as easy to get into a middle range college as it was when I went. Can't imagine leaving jello for brain teens to stay on top of this all by themselves....their brains are to busy restructuring.[/QUOTE]
I guess I don't see it that way. If you spread the process out over time, it isn't that much of a chore. This is part of why we are doing our initial visits this summer though too. They have already narrowed down the kind of campus they want, which I think is the hardest. One click when they get new information about a new school will tell them that the campus is too big or too small, in the garbage that one goes. ACT/SAT's our school has a 6 week prep class before each test. It's 6 Saturday mornings before each test session. They have already looked at that info and know when they want to sign up--that took about 10 minutes.
One new thing we heard they need is for the one school they just visited they want an activities resume so they will have to spend a little time getting caught up on that, probably even today. They are just going to make an excel spreadsheet of what they did and the hours they put into it. That might take 30 minutes.
Also, the midrange colleges we have looked at, the scores/grades you are posting are AVERAGES, not the bottom of what they accept. They still have plenty of kids that have 3.0's too. Now, if you are talking Harvard, I think you are more on track with their grade/test score expectations. Some of the schools have asked for essays, some have not. Also, most midrange schools do not have 20,000 kids applying and have pretty high acceptance rates.
I've just pretty much driven the car to visits and answered questions when they come up.