StudentsReview Advice!
• What is a good school? • Statistical Significance • How to choose a Major • How to choose your Career • What you make of it? • How Ivy League Admissions works • On the Student/Faculty Ratio • FAFSA: Who is a Parent? • FAFSA: Parent Contribution • FAFSA: Dream out of reach • College Financial Planning • Survive College and Graduate • Sniffing Out Commuter Schools • Preparing for College: A HS Roadmap • Talking to Your Parents about College. • Is a top college worth it? •
Why is college hard?
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Why Kids Aren't Happy in Traditional Schools
• Essential College TipsAh, college. Considered by many to be the time of a young person's lif...
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NPR, the cost of college...
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more→ • Senior Year (Tips and experience)It's the end of junior year and everyone is anticipating the arrival o...
more→ • Informational Overload! What Should I Look For in a College or University?We are in an instant information age, where you can find almost anythi...
more→ • Personality Type and College ChoicePersonality type is something very important to consider when deciding...
more→ • A Free Application is a Good Application As a senior finishing her scholastic year, I feel that it is my duty ...
more→ • College Academic Survival GuideThe leap from high school to college academics is not an insignificant...
more→ • Getting Involved: The Key to College HappinessAs a tour guide, the absolute, most frequently asked question I got wa...
more→ • Choose a Path, Not a MajorUnless you're one of the fortunate souls who's already found their cal...
more→ • The Scoop on State SchoolsA recent college graduate, I vividly remember touring campuses as a
p...
more→ • The Purpose of a Higher EducationYou are one of the millions of people this year applying for admission...
more→ • The Importance of Choosing the Right College Major (2012)One of the most important academic choices you'll make while in colleg...
more→ • How to choose a college majorI was not sure what college major to choose. When you are in your late...
more→ • How to guarantee your acceptance to many collegesAre your grades are not what you think they should be from high school...
more→ • Nailing the College Application ProcessCollege applications seem to always be put on top of students procrast...
more→ • What to do for a Successful InterviewInterviews seem to become more commonplace in every facet of life as o...
more→ • I Don't Know Where to Start (General College Advice)Preparing for college is a difficult time for every student and it?s o...
more→ • Attitude and Dress Code for an Interview (General College Advice) An interview is something we all have to go through when we get a job...
more→ • Starting College (General College Advice)College is a huge milestone in your life. You?ve seen the castle like ...
more→ • Boston Apartment lease: Watch out!Are you a student and about to sign the very first lease in your li... more→
• What college is right for you?When thinking about their choices for colleges, many students and pare...
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it!
I got straight A's in high school, taking the most rigorous courses that my high school offered. I played tennis for 3 years, tutored for 2 years, and volunteered in Appalachia for 4 consecutive summers building homes for the impoverished. In my senior year I completed a semester-long research project investigating the effects of vitamin A on tissue regeneration in axolotl salamanders, winning 2nd place at the area science symposium.
I would recommend students do everything that they are honestly passionate about. Seriously, don't do volunteer work if you don't honestly like it-colleges can see through that. Find what you're passionate about, and do it. Getting good grades helps, but the effort is most important. If you work hard at whatever you do, that will shine through in your essays (which are very important, especially for Brown). College applicants who have been dreaming of that one special college since 7th grade and doing all the cookie-cutter activities to get in will soon realize that being uniquely passionate and cultivating an iron-hard work ethic are not only the most important things in the college admissions process--they are the most important things in life.
Lastly, if you get rejected from a school, it will hurt. It will hurt especially if you get rejected from your dream school (or schools). Try to remember that one's education depends almost completely on the person, not the school. Schools can provide opportunities, but it is up to the student to take them. Make the most of any opportunities that come your way, because that is what will separate you.
And finally, there are only 3 schools you should ever think about picking over Brown for undergraduate study: Princeton, Yale, and Stanford (again, just my opinion)
ACT: 34 SAT: 2300 Male