Posts Tagged ‘college counselor miami’

Coming Soon: Changes to the 2011-12 Common Application

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

Get your Preview Here!

I had the pleasure of attending The Southern Association for College Admission Counseling (SACAC) Conference in Atlanta, GA this week. While many of the seminars were extremely interesting, of importance to all future college applicants was the preview of the 2011-2012 Common Application.

Links below will take you to the preview and an explanation of the changes but here are some of the highlights:

· 48 New Schools have been added to the Common Application including:
1. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC)l
2. University of Southern California (USC)
3. Seton Hall University
4. University of Kentucky
5. University of Hartford

· On the activities page the number of activities has been reduced from 12 to 10 with more room to write a description of the specific activity.

· Students will have the ability to re-order the activities after entering them into the application. Before, you couldn’t re-order the activities without deleting and starting over.

· Essay length should be between 250-500 words, according to the essay prompt.

· The website to check admission status will be accessible from mobile phones.

· The application goes live August 1, 2011.

Preview of 2011-12 Common Application
The preview version of the 2011-12 Common Application is available here. The 2011-12 Common App Online will launch on August 1. Until then, use this preview to familiarize yourself with the application.

An explanation of the changes and why they were made can be found here.

Fast Facts on the Common Application
The Common Application gives students the ability to submit one application for admission to approximately 460 schools. Students can then spend less time on tedious paperwork and have more time for the fun stuff, like studying for the SAT.

International College Counselors

954-414-9986

ABOUT INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COUNSELORS
International College Counselors provides expert college counseling on undergraduate and graduate college admissions, financial aid, tuition, essays, and college applications. Mandee Heller Adler, college admissions consultant and Founder of International College Counselors tailors her college counseling and college coaching services to address the goals, needs, and dreams of each student. Our college advising company works with domestic and international students. Let us help you make the best decisions in choosing, getting into, and paying for college.

Miami Dade College is Free for Students with a 3.0 GPA or Higher.

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

Miami Dade College is Free for Students with a 3.0 GPA or Higher.

International College Counselors is excited to tell you about this.

Incredibly,  all Miami-Dade public and private school students who graduate with a GPA 3.0 or higher will be able to attend Miami Dade College for free starting in the fall.

The American Dream Scholarship, the first scholarship program of its kind, was designed to let more Miami-Dade students focus on their academic ambitions than worry about paying their bills.

The scholarship will cover 60 credits, which would normally cost about $6,500.

The scholarship is open to any student with a diploma, whether he or she attended a private, public or charter school in Miami-Dade, or was home-schooled.

Entering students would have to meet certain qualifications:

• Be a legal Miami-Dade County resident.

• Graduate from high school with a weighted GPA of 3.0 or higher and maintain that through
college.

• Have MDC entry test scores indicating they are ready for college.

• Apply for federal student aid.

• Not be currently enrolled at Miami Dade College.

All graduating seniors this year will be eligible for scholarships come next fall.  There is no separate application for the American Dream Scholarship. Simply apply for admission to Miami Dade College, and submit your Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) by the Aug. 1, 2011 deadline; meet the requirements; and register for at least 12 credits in the fall and you will be awarded this opportunity.

For more information on the American Dream Scholarship here is the link , or call or email us at International College Counselors .

International College Counselors
Main office: 954.253.5719

ABOUT INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COUNSELORS
International College Counselors provides expert college counseling on undergraduate and graduate college admissions, financial aid, tuition, essays, and college applications. Mandee Heller Adler, college admissions consultant and Founder of International College Counselors tailors her college counseling and college coaching services to address the goals, needs, and dreams of each student. Our college advising company works with domestic and international students. Let us help you make the best decisions in choosing, getting into, and paying for college.

2011 Miami Herald Business Plan Challenge

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

Please see below for a wonderful opportunity for students interested in business.

Have you hatched a great idea for a business? If your business is less than 2 years old or exists only on paper, you can enter the 13th Annual Miami Herald Business Plan Challenge, co-sponsored by Florida International University’s Pino Global Entrepreneurship Center.
This year, we will have three tracks: A Community Track open to anyone in South Florida; an FIU Track open to students and alumni of the university; and a High School Track for grades 9-12.
 
Panels of judges will select the three best business plans in each track based on both the quality of the idea and the submitted plan. Readers will be able to vote online at MiamiHerald.com for a “People’s Pick” winner in the community and FIU tracks. (Details on online balloting will be coming in April.)
 
We will also name an overall 2011 Challenge Champion, which can come from any of the three tracks.

GENERAL RULES FOR ALL TRACKS 
 
·  The entry must be no more than three typewritten pages, 8.5-by-11 paper; type no smaller than 10 point, please. You may include one more page of supporting material – such as a product picture or diagram, a spreadsheet or marketing materials. Think of your plan as an executive summary, offering just the highlights of your business plan. See tips for preparing your entry below.
 
·  Entries must be for proposed for-profit businesses or firms in the start-up phase (less than 2 years old on Feb. 7, 2011). Sorry, no nonprofits and no existing franchises. If your submission is an original franchise idea, it will be allowed. But if you are implementing someone else’s franchise plan, it’s not eligible. Multiple entries from one person are allowed if they are different business ideas.
 
·  Entry deadline: E-mailed by 11:59 p.m. Friday, March 25, 2011.
 
·  E-mail your entry to:
challenge@MiamiHerald.com – for the Community Track
fiuchallenge@MiamiHerald.com — for the FIU Track
highschoolchallenge@MiamiHerald.com – for the High School Track
  
You should receive an automated response after sending. For questions, problems or further confirmation: e-mail ndahlberg@MiamiHerald.com
 
·  Awards: The Challenge Champion, the top three competitors in the community, FIU and student tracks as well as the People’s Pick winners will be the subjects of a Business Monday cover story and section May 16. Winners will be invited to a luncheon in their honor where they will meet with The Miami Herald’s business editors, reporters and judges, as well as a Hall of Fame reception hosted by FIU’s College of Business Administration.
 
SPECIFIC RULES
 
·  High School Track: The contest is open to students in grades 9-12 in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach and Monroe counties. A one- or two-page entry is fine in the student category. Please put “High School Entry” at the top. We’ll also film a video of the top student winner and it will be featured on MiamiHerald.com.
·  FIU Track: You must be a student or alumnus of FIU to enter. If a team is entering, at least one member of the team must be an FIU student or alumnus. Please write “FIU Entry” at the top of your submission. You cannot enter both the community track and the FIU track with the same idea.
·  You must be a South Florida resident (Miami-Dade, Broward, Monroe and Palm Beach counties). See additional rules for FIU and student tracks under Specific Rules section.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/01/30/2042037/2011-business-plan-challenge-rules.html#ixzz1GaEnqtsr

The Other March Madness

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

March madness is here and in full swing. 

Students and parents are biting their nails and experiencing butterflies in the stomach.  However, they’re not even thinking of basketball.   They’re thinking of college admissions.

High school seniors know that the acceptance letters are in the mail – or will soon be in the mail. 
Realistically, there is little a parent can do to lessen the anxiety.  Chances are moms and dads are feeling anxious themselves.  

Parents, it’s your job to be the rock.  It’s your job to be supportive.  Even before the acceptance letters come, let your child know how proud you are of him or her for getting though high school and wanting to go to college.  Let them know you think they’ll have a great experience no matter where they go. 

And, parents, after the letters arrive, whether your child gets into a first choice college or not, remain supportive.  This is a hard time for a student whether they get into their first choice college or not.  For students who get rejected, this may be the first time they’re dealing with major disappointment. Your job is to stop this from damaging their self-esteem. For students who get in, after the initial euphoria, they’ll start thinking about what going to college really means. Leaving home, leaving friends, leaving a comfortable routine, having to find themselves and make their own way.  Understandably, this may feel overwhelming. 

It’s your job to help guide you child through their emotions.  This time is about your child, it’s is not about you. 

How to Help Your Child Deal with Disappointment

1. Talk it out.  If your student is rejected from the first choice college, allow your child to vent their emotions.  Talk about it and turn it into a teachable moment. Be sensitive and acknowledge the pain of disappointment.  Then help your child, one, accept that he or she didn’t get in and, two, move forward with the opportunities that do present themselves.

2. Let your child know that getting into their first pick college is important, but if they don’t it’s not the end of the world. Let them know you won’t love or like them any less and they shouldn’t love or like themselves any less either.  College is a step on a long road.  A big step, but not the final destination.

3. Add up what really counts.  The college admissions officers are looking at numbers.  A GPA, an SAT score, and the number of AP courses. Numbers have little to do with your child as a good person.  Besides, it’s too late now to change the numbers, so beating yourself up isn’t going to make anything better. 

4. Let your student know a lot of the college admission process was out of his or her control.    While the process is fair and thorough, college admissions are subjective.  Perhaps even more than most students and parents realize. High scores aren’t the only thing that counts. Subjectivity comes into play as admissions officers compare the applications.  Maybe the band really needed a new bassoon player.

5. Don’t let your child take denial personally. Someone at the college just didn’t think your child was the right fit at the time. Your student may actually be better off someplace else and it’s just not apparent right now.

6. Celebrate the college acceptance letters your child does get. Getting into any college is something to celebrate.

7. Remember a student can always transfer.  Our recommendation is to keep this as a back pocket option and not as a goal.  If a student goes to a college with the intent of transferring, he or she won’t be able to enjoy the full college experience they can have.  Many students find that once they settle in, they’re actually very happy. 

We at International College Counselors promise.  No matter what happens.  After the madness, there will be a calm.  

ABOUT INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COUNSELORS

International College Counselors is a US-based company that provides expert college counseling for international students on undergraduate and graduate college admissions, financial aid, tuition, essays, and college applications. Mandee Heller Adler, a graduate of Harvard Business School,
along with her staff of college admissions advisors, tailor the college counseling and college coaching services to address the goals, needs, and dreams of each student.

2011 International College Counselors Scholarship

Saturday, February 5th, 2011

Expert college admissions counselors at International College Counselors are pleased to announce our continuing annual scholarship competition. Students in grade 9-12 from Dade, Broward, Palm Beach counties and elsewhere are invited to submit an essay that answers the question:

What makes a good college education?

Five prizes of $250 each will be awarded, three to students who attend school within Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County; one to a student from the U.S. outside Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County; and one to an international student who attends a college within the U.S.

Work will be judged on the basis of originality and effectiveness of argument or presentation.

Please note the following contest guidelines:

Submissions may be in Spanish or English, 500 words or less

The deadline for receipt of essays is April 1, 2011

The contest rules and submission information can be found at International College Counselors. Select the “Scholarship” section of the website for downloadable contest rules. You can also go directly to the entry application.

Students do not need to be clients of International College Counselors to enter or to win this annual scholarship competition.

The International College Counselors High School Essay Contest has established a Scholarship Fund to increase awareness of the value of higher education among high school students, as well as to give financial aid for tuition to college-bound students.

Good luck to all!

International College Counselors
(954) 414-9986

Mandee Heller Adler mandee@internationalcollegecounselors.com
Barry N. Liebowitz barry@internationalcollegecounselors.com
Jonathan Saltzburg jonathan@internationalcollegecounselors.com
Pablo Botero pablo@internationalcollegecounselors.com

International College Counselors
Office Locations

Boca Raton: 595 South Federal Highway
Hollywood: 4700 Sheridan Street
Miami Beach: 1111 Lincoln Road
Palm Beach Gardens: 800 Village Square Crossing

About International College Counselors
International College Counselors is a Miami-based company that provides expert college counseling on undergraduate and graduate college admissions, financial aid, tuition, essays, and college applications. The college admissions counselors at International College Counselors work with domestic and international students. International College Counselors, founded by Mandee Heller Adler, tailors college counseling and college coaching services to address the goals, needs, and dreams of each student.

2011 International College Counselors Scholarship

Saturday, February 5th, 2011

Expert college admissions counselors at International College Counselors are pleased to announce our continuing annual scholarship competition.  Students in grade 9-12 from Dade, Broward, Palm Beach counties and elsewhere are invited to submit an essay that answers the question:

What makes a good college education?
 
Five prizes of $250 each will be awarded, three to students who attend school within Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County; one to a student from the U.S. outside Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County; and one to an international student who attends a college within the U.S.  
 
Work will be judged on the basis of originality and effectiveness of argument or presentation.

 Please note the following contest guidelines:

Submissions may be in Spanish or English, 500 words or less

The deadline for receipt of essays is April 1, 2011
 
The contest rules and submission information can be found at International College Counselors.  Select the “Scholarship” section of the website for downloadable contest rules. You can also go directly to the entry application.
 
Students do not need to be clients of International College Counselors to enter or to win this annual scholarship competition. 
 
The International College Counselors High School Essay Contest has established a Scholarship Fund to increase awareness of the value of higher education among high school students, as well as to give financial aid for tuition to college-bound students.
 
Good luck to all! 
 

                  

International College Counselors
(954) 414-9986
 
 Mandee Heller Adler mandee@internationalcollegecounselors.com
 Barry N. Liebowitz barry@internationalcollegecounselors.com
 Jonathan Saltzburg jonathan@internationalcollegecounselors.com
Pablo Botero pablo@internationalcollegecounselors.com

International College Counselors
 Office Locations

Boca Raton: 595 South Federal Highway
Hollywood: 4700 Sheridan Street 
Miami Beach: 1111 Lincoln Road 
Palm Beach Gardens: 800 Village Square Crossing

About International College Counselors
International College Counselors is a Miami-based company that provides expert college counseling on undergraduate and graduate college admissions, financial aid, tuition, essays, and college applications. The college admissions counselors at International College Counselors work with domestic and international students. International College Counselors, founded by Mandee Heller Adler,  tailors college counseling and college coaching services to address the goals, needs, and dreams of each student.

How Early is Too Early to Study for the SAT?

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

Freshmen and Sophomores:
 
When should you start studying for the SAT and ACT?
a. Now
b. Immediately
c. Forthwith
d. All of the above. 

Answer: d.   For duh.
 
It’s never too early to start studying for the SAT or ACT.  Do not plan on cramming for these critical tests.  These tests are scored on a curve and students are taking the tests world-wide.
 
What students don’t realize is that there are many types of study materials available.  Some are even fun and most students don’t know all these options exist. 
 
Online you can find crosswords and other games.  If your student likes to read, there are mystery books, vampire novels, classic literature paperbacks, vocabulary cartoons, manga comics and a few potboilers designed to strengthen vocabulary.   There are also the flash cards.  If your student is an audio learner, or so busy that bath time is his or her only free time to add another activity, there are rap songs and rock songs that have been written as SAT and ACT prep as well.  There are also many phone apps available.  Even on Twitter they can find SAT tutors offering a word a day. 
 
There are a number of different books written to help students tackle the math sections of the SAT and ACT, too.  Head to your local bookstore or hop online with your child to find the books that most appeal to you.  While the test is always the same, different authors take different approaches.
 
Tutoring or test prep works for many students. Contact one of our expert college counselors and we will give you names and numbers of recommended SAT and ACT experts to call.

Juniors: Take your Standardized Tests

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Now is not the time for students to procrastinate. It can hurt you.

Juniors: FINISH all standardized tests THIS YEAR. This includes the ACT/ SAT/ TOEFL and SUBJECT TESTS.

Waiting until the fall is almost always a bad idea, as our expert college counselors can tell you.

Why?

1. It makes choosing an early decision school extremely difficult.
2. Students cannot apply in August to rolling admissions schools.
3. If an emergency arises on the day of the test, or you’re sick, or your car breaks down, there will be no time to take the test again. If your bad day happens on the last possible test date, you’re truly out of luck – your bad score may be the one you’ll have to live with.

June 15th is the day Juniors should have completed their standardized tests, and have their early decision school selected (if students will be applying early decision). For International College Counselors students, the first draft of the common application essays is also due.

Sure college counselors will agree there’s no point in taking a standardized test if you aren’t ready, but ICC is delivering this message with enough time for you to prepare. If you need tutoring or test prep, contact one of our expert college counselors and we will give you names and numbers to call. And read about your standardized test score reporting rights.

Now is a great time for sophomores to begin to prepare for the SAT/ACT/ TOEFL and SUBJECT TESTS. Students who finish those exams in their junior year are always the happiest and usually the most successful.

International College Counselors
Main office: 954.253.5719

ABOUT INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COUNSELORS
International College Counselors provides expert college counseling on undergraduate and graduate college admissions, financial aid, tuition, essays, and college applications. Mandee Heller Adler, college admissions consultant and Founder of International College Counselors tailors her college counseling and college coaching services to address the goals, needs, and dreams of each student. Our college advising company works with domestic and international students. Let us help you make the best decisions in choosing, getting into, and paying for college.

FAFSA Deadline is Fast Approaching – Apply Now

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

The deadline to file the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (http://www.fafsa.gov) is February 1. June 30 is the official government deadline but for many schools including Boston U, Brandeis, and Carnegie Mellon it is February 1. If you do not get your form in by this date, you may not be eligible to receive certain merit scholarships and/or school financial aid.

We repeat: Some MERIT scholarships are tied to filling out the FAFSA. Check the college websites to see if you need to apply.

ALL students should fill out the FAFSA no matter what their household income is, if they would like to be eligible for aid.
This is a strong recommendation from the expert college counselors at International College Counselors.

There is no penalty for filling out the FAFSA whether you receive aid or not. Many students are surprised by the aid they are eligible to receive. And then you can choose to use this aid or not.

The FAFSA is free. You do not need to pay for it, and you do not need to have checked the “financial aid” box on the common application.

The FAFSA is also a long document with many questions, and you need to gather documentation (a list is below). Do NOT leave this until the last minute.

Completing the FAFSA, an introductory publication for students, provides free instructions on how to complete the FAFSA.

If you have specific questions, representatives at FAFSA are EXTREMELY helpful. Do not hesitate to call the contact numbers.
FAFSA contact info.

For more information on financial aid, please contact International College Counselors.

Also, when beginning your FAFSA, please refer to the “Common Errors When Filing for Financial Aid” page in your binder. If you are missing it, please let us know.

Before submitting the FAFSA double-check EVERYTHING.

Documentation and paperwork you need to complete the FAFSA

In addition to gathering financial information, you will need a FAFSA account and a FAFSA pin. Go to FAFSA.gov to get one.

NOTE: All financial information needs to be for the previous financial year. Students filing for the 2011-2012 FAFSA need documentation from tax year 2010. If you don’t have your W-2 tax forms from 2010, you can estimate by using pay stubs and then file a FAFSA correction later.

• Your Social Security card. Make sure you enter the number correctly!
• Your driver’s license (if any)
• Your 2010 W-2 forms and other records of money earned
• Your (and your spouse’s, if you are married) 2010 Federal Income Tax Return.
• IRS 1040, 1040A, 1040 EZ
• Foreign Tax Return, or
• Tax Return for Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Marshall Islands, the Federal States of Micronesia, or Palau
• Your Parents’ 2010 Federal Income Tax Return (if you are a dependent student)
• Your 2010 untaxed income records
• Your current bank statements
• Your current business and investment mortgage information, business and farm records, stock, bond and other investment records
• Your alien registration or permanent resident card (if you are not a U.S. citizen)

Contact International College Counselors with any questions you may have.

International College Counselors
Main office: 954.253.5719

ABOUT INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COUNSELORS
International College Counselors provides expert college counseling on undergraduate and graduate college admissions, financial aid, tuition, essays, and college applications. Mandee Heller Adler, college admissions consultant and Founder of International College Counselors tailors her college counseling and college coaching services to address the goals, needs, and dreams of each student. Our college advising company works with domestic and international students. Let us help you make the best decisions in choosing, getting into, and paying for college.

10 New Year Resolutions for High School Students

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

The New Year is a great time to reflect on the changes we want to or need to make.  If you’re a student looking at ways to improve yourself and make the transition to college easier, International College Counselors offers a few more resolutions you might want to add to your list. 

1. Stop procrastinating. How often have you underestimated how much time it will take to get something done?  Then, how sad are you when you don’t have the time to do your best. At some point, the procrastinator has to write four college essays in one night – on top of completing schoolwork.  Usually, this doesn’t turn out so well. If you finish a project earlier than you thought you would, then consider yourself ahead.

2. Commit yourself to getting good grades. Good grades are entirely necessary to get into a good school unless you’re a top notch athlete. The best case scenario is that you have good grades from the beginning. However, if you start off badly and improve your grades, colleges will give you points for this. Many admissions officers won’t look at your application if your grades are too low or show a steady decline. Spending a night studying while your friends play Wii may not excite you, but you need to look at this long-term. Think of it this way, grades are a bridge. They will serve you to get into a college where you will have more freedom.  In college, grades may not be as important as in high school.
 
3. Don’t do it all.  It’s better to concentrate on a few things and excel in them than if you join every sport, activity and club that you can cram into your schedule. Anyone can join 10 clubs and be marginally involved in them all. Schools are looking for commitment that shows you’re willing to stick with something and make the most of it. 

4. Keep a calendar. Deadlines creep up quickly.  And the closer the date, the more you’ll feel the pressure.  Most students don’t do their best under pressure.  And colleges, scholarships, federal aid, and standardized testing services are not going to be sympathetic to any excuses you have about missing a deadline.   If you miss a deadline, you miss an opportunity.

5. Take standardized tests early. You won’t know how high you can score until you take the test. Wait too long and you won’t have enough time to retake it. And many things can affect your test score on any given day, including the state of your health, and you can’t plan not to get the flu or food poisoning.  Taking the test early will also allow time to take a test prep course if necessary.

6. Do your research. Know what the choices are when it comes to colleges.  This way you can avoid any coulda, shoulda, woulda regrets later in life. Research could be as simple as visiting a school’s website. 

7. Try something new. High school is a great time to spread your wings.  It’s about new experiences and self-discovery.  Want a certain internship, there’s no harm in calling up and asking if they have any room for an eager high school student to work there.   Want to try a new sport or activity, go ahead and try it.  You’re not expected to leave high school knowing exactly what you want to do, but this is a chance to start narrowing down your interests. You’ll never know what you like – or how good you are at something – until you try something.

8. Be excited about going to college.  Wherever you go to college, you’re going to meet new people, learn new things, and have a great time. That’s reason enough to be excited whether you end up attending a first choice school or a safety.  

9. Do what your college counselor tells you.  Students:  We at International College Counselors are here to get you what you want out of life.

10. Banish the self-doubt. Doubting your own abilities only holds you back from achieving what you want to achieve.  Just say no to these thoughts and others like them:

“I can’t do this.”
“I’m not as smart as my classmates.”
“I’ll never get better than a 2.7 grade-point average.”
“I’ll only get into a community college anyway”
 “There’s no point in thinking I’ll get into my first choice college.”
 
HAPPY 2011!

International College Counselors
3107 Stirling Road, Suite 208
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33312 USA
(954) 414-9986

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