Counselors are always looking for online resources to
recommend to parents and students. These
sites can’t replace strong school-based counseling programs, but they sure can
supplement them nicely.
Here are some new and updated Web sites you’ll want to be
sure to look at and pass along to your clients and their families.
The National Association for College Admission Counseling (http://www.nacacnet.org/studentinfo/Pages/Default.aspx)
has always had a strong collection of publications and resources for parents
and students in the college selection process.
Thanks to a redesign of part of their Web site, NACAC has beefed up
their offerings and organized them in a dynamic new way.
This new Web page outlines the ideas and activities students
and parents should consider at every grade in high school, and concludes with a
fifth tab that addresses the key issues of a strong college transition. Links
to five key NACAC documents are on the side of the site, including a list of
student rights and responsibilities in the college selection process, and
advice on applying for financial aid. Students
and parents will value the clean,
clear look of the page, as well as the depth of the advice that’s offered.
While it may not be new, the College Navigator site (http://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/)
is one of the most overlooked college search tools around. The page offers an easy-to-use college search
tool that becomes more sophisticated only if the user wants more features, and
the side-by-side comparison of one college to another is a rare find in college
search sites.
CN is also a great place to go for financial aid
advice. Access to the free financial aid
FAFSA is just a click away (CN and FAFSA are both run by the US government),
and the College Affordability and Transparency
Center is the first bold
attempt to try and give students a sense if they’ll be getting their money’s
worth at that college. Students should never rule a college out just because of
price; on the other hand, only applying to colleges that cost $45,000 isn’t the
way to go either. Predicting how much
aid you’ll get is never an exact science, but the Center is more than worth a
very close look as you build a list of colleges, keeping price in mind.
Finally, students and parents need to take a look at the
online version of a classic college guide that changed the world. Colleges
That Change Lives was written by former New York Times Education writer
Loren Pope. Pope’s goal was to highlight
colleges that best represented what college is all about—a chance for students
to learn and explore the world with the right mix of support and challenge in
an individualized learning space.
An updated edition of CTCL is rumored to be in the works,
but college-bound families can get the best of the book online for free (http://www.ctcl.org/). Readers will
want to make sure to stop at the News & Resources tab and read the articles
“Common Misperceptions” and ”How to Do a College Search.” The site also includes detailed information
on each of the CTCL colleges.
Students may not be interested in applying to small liberal
arts colleges, and parents may find the tuition at CTCL schools to be a little
steep. On the other hand, the Web site
teaches readers how to look at every
college, and to search even the biggest colleges for personalized learning
experiences. Such opportunities do exist
at some big colleges, but you have to know what you’re looking for; the CTCL
Web page can train your eyes and ears to make the best college match.
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