Posts Tagged ‘college counselor NYC’

2010 INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COUNSELORS SCHOLARSHIP

Monday, September 14th, 2009

From the Miami college counselors at International College Counselors:

2010 INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COUNSELORS SCHOLARSHIP

All students in 9th through 11th grade are eligible to participate. An essay is required that answers the question:

What makes a good college education?

There will be five scholarship award winners. Three winners will be chosen from within Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County. One winner will be selected from the U.S. – outside Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County. An additional winner will be selected from outside the U.S. who wishes to attend college in the U.S. All five winners will receive a $250 scholarship provided by International College Counselors.

Learn more about this scholarship at http://www.InternationalCollegeCounselors.com.

The goal of the International College Counselors High School Scholarship is to increase awareness of the value of higher education among high school students.

Essay Length: 500 Words or less

Essay Deadline: February 27, 2010

All submissions must be accompanied by a completed Official Student Registration Form and official rules are available at www.internationalcollegecounelors.com

ABOUT US:
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.

International College Counselors
Main Office
Mandee Heller Adler (954) 253-5719
Barry N. Liebowitz (954) 658-4570
mandee@internationalcollegecounselors.com
barry@internationalcollegecounselors.com

International College Counselors
European Office
Kate McKenna
Dialing from the USA call: 011 + 359 + 88-810-9427
Dialing from Europe call: 00 + 359 +88-810-9427
kate@internationalcollegecounselors.com

Starting the School Year Right

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Advice from an expert college advisor

For anxious new freshman or confident seniors, heading back to school signals a time of transition: new classes, new teachers, new opportunities. For all grades too, this is a time to prepare for college by making the most of this year.

To help start the school year right, our college counselors at International College Counselors made a general September checklist.

• Consider your courses and teachers and decide if you’re happy with your choices. Ask yourself if you’re sufficiently challenged or overwhelmed, and if you should switch some classes. It’s important to take challenging courses, but it’s equally important that you do well in them.

• Build your vocabulary. READ. READ. READ. The PSAT and SAT both count on your having a good vocabulary. It is much easier to build this slowly and naturally than to try and cram it in before a test. If you see or hear words you don’t know or can’t grasp the meaning from the context, jot them down and then, use a dictionary or www.dictionary.com to learn the word’s definition.

• Take a good look at what your high school offers like clubs, activities, sports, and classes. The beginning of the school year is the best time to make some decisions about what interests you. Did you like what you were doing last year or do you want to make a change? For freshmen, this is a chance to try something completely new. Once you decide what you want to try, find out how you can get involved in those specific organizations. And remember, to try something new. You may never know if you’ll like something until you try it and you can always change.

• Start looking into scholarships and consider which ones you will apply for. There are many freshmen are eligible for as well as sophomores, juniors and seniors. Write down the deadlines and stay on top of them.
Stay tuned, in our next blog we’re going to reveal the International College Counselors scholarship. We’re awarding 4 scholarships worth $250 each.

The college advisors at International College Counselors are available to help you. Please contact us with any questions you may have.

International College Counselors
Main office: 954.253.5719

Mandee Heller Adler
mandee@internationalcollegecounselors.com

Barry Liebowitz
barry@internationalcollegecounselors.com

Save Money By Renting Textbooks

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

To the many students from NYC to MIami, college counselors at International College Counselors helped get into college this year – from the University of Florida to the Ivies – a word of advice for you…

There’s a new way to save money on textbooks: Rent them!

Textbook publishers are starting to let students rent their books. They’re aiming to thwart competition from used-book sales, digital texts, and other textbook rental businesses including ones that are already online like Chegg.

Recently, one of the nation’s largest textbook publishers, Cengage Learning, announced that it would start renting books to students for 40% to 70% off the retail price. Several hundred titles will be for rent with more to be added in 2010. Students will be able to buy print textbooks, e-textbooks, individual e-chapters and audio books, as well as homework and study tools. Free content and discounts for purchasing multiple products will also be available. As a bonus to renting from them, Cengage will give students immediate access to an e-book of the first chapter so that they don’t fall behind while the book making it’s way through the mail.

A few college bookstores have been offering rentals for years, and more are moving in that direction. Barnes & Noble College Booksellers is starting a pilot rental program at three of its 624 college bookstores this fall.

No big surprise that students are looking to cut costs. College textbooks often cost more than $100 apiece, costing students an average of $700 to $1,100 a year. This adds up to one of their biggest expenses after tuition and room and board. Many students who buy the textbooks often resell them at the end of the year, feeding the used-book market, which publishers hate as they don’t get any money from that resale. Of course, students only get a very small percentage of their money back for a book. It’s the school bookstore that will make the killing, by marking them up astronomically and selling them the next year/semester.

The Higher Education Opportunity Act, passed last year, included $10 million for grants to support textbook rental pilot programs. At International College Counselors, our college advisors are looking to see how the 20 college bookstores who have applied for grants do. If they do well, we’re bound to see a lot more of this in the future.

Of course, books may one day be all digital, but that’s a time that has not yet come.

If you have any other college admissions questions for a college counselor, I’d be happy to answer them. I work with international students (9 countries and counting!) as well as those in the U.S. Please write me here or at my personal email which can be found on my International College Counselors college counseling website.

Mandee Heller Adler, Founder and Principal of International College Counselors

www.internationalcollegecounselors.com

By the way, my college advising company is opening a new branch of International College Counselors in NYC so now you can visit our college advisor NYC as well. Our college counselors, MIami, are here for you too.

TIPS FOR WRITING THE COLLEGE ESSAY

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

The personal essay can help you improve your chances for admission. It may be as short as 250 words, but the words you choose can mean the difference between a “maybe” and a “yes”. The essay tells the admissions committee how and why you are different from everybody else.

While there is no exact formula for the perfect admission essay, here are some tips you should consider when trying to make a lasting impression on someone who reads 50 to 100 essays a day:

Write about yourself. The admissions committee isn’t looking to learn about the American Revolution or Bioresearch, they’re looking to learn about you – your achievements, your obstacles, your goals, your values. Whatever topic you choose to center your essay around, make sure you shine through.

Focus on one facet of yourself. Pick one project, one activity, or one passion. Don’t try to cover too many topics in your essay, or you’ll end up with a laundry list of details and activities that won’t give the admissions committee what they’re looking for in the essay: an in-depth look at you. The magic is in the details.

Tell a good story.
Demonstrate how you are compassionate – don’t just tell readers you are. If you had a difficulty, don’t tell the admissions committee your complaints, tell them how you overcame them.

Keep it real. Don’t make things up. If you speak from the heart, it will show and your essay will flow more easily. Choosing something you’ve experienced will also give you the vivid and specific details the admissions committee is looking to see in your essay.

Share your opinions, but avoid anything controversial. You don’t know who is going to be reading your essay so you want to appeal to the broadest audience possible. That’s means write nothing about your opinions on what’s wrong with governments or religion, please.

Don’t repeat information already in your application. If you’ve taken 7 AP courses in one year, don’t list that you’ve done it or that you did it because you “love to learn” unless this relates directly to the focus of your essay. Admissions officers want to learn something about you from your essay that they can’t learn from reading the other sections of your application.

Spend time on your essay. Hemingway didn’t write his stories overnight and neither should you write your essay overnight. The admission committee is looking to see what you can do given the time to brainstorm, rewrite and polish. They are looking to see what topic you chose and what you did with it. An essay won’t help you if it’s sloppy and uninformative.

Check your grammar and spelling. Yes, this counts. You can write conversationally, but the grammar and spelling still need to be correct. And don’t solely rely on your computer’s spell check. Often times, the wrong word (spelled correctly) can slip by. And nothing says last-minute essay more than the wrong spelling and grammar.

Show the essay to someone who can give you objective feedback. Sometimes you can get too close to the essay and be unable to see it clearly. Other people can often tell if there isn’t enough being revealed, or your essay rambles, or if the humor is falling flat, or if you’re not making the impression you’d want to. Remember, this essay is going to someone who doesn’t know you and is going to be making a big decision on what they’ll learn from it.

College counselors Miami to NYC at International College Counselors are available to review your essays and help you brainstorm topics. To hop on the calendar for our NYC or Miami college advisors, call or email Mandee Heller Adler at International College Counselors. The number is 954.253.5719. The email is mandee@internationalcollegecounelors.com

New Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act will Make College More Affordable

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Whether you’re in California, NYC or Miami, college advisors at International College Counselors are pleased to report that the House Education and Labor Committee passed the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (SAFRA).

This legislation, passed last Tuesday, will make college dramatically more affordable by investing billions of dollars in additional student aid – and at no new cost to taxpayers.

The SAFRA will generate almost $100 billion in savings over the next ten years. These savings would be directly invested in students and families by

• Boosting Pell Grant scholarships by investing $40 billion to increase the maximum annual Pell Grant scholarship to $5,550 in 2010 and to $6,900 by 2019. Starting in 2010, the scholarship will be linked to match rising costs-of-living by indexing it to the Consumer Price Index plus 1 percent.

• Keeping interest rates low on need-based – or subsidized – federal student loans by making the interest rates on these loans variable beginning in 2012.

• Creating a more reliable and effective financial aid system for families.

• Investing $3 billion to bolster college access and completion support programs for student.

• Strengthening the Perkins Loan program, a campus-based program that provides low-cost federal loans to students.

• Making it easier for families to apply for financial aid by simplifying the FAFSA form.

• Investing $2.55 billion in Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Minority-Serving Institutions to provide students with the support they need to stay in school and graduate.

• Providing loan forgiveness for members of the military who are called up to duty in the middle of the academic year.

• Enacting President Obama’s key education priorities.

The Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (H.R. 3221) was passed by the committee with a vote of 30-17.

In addition to saving $87 billion over ten years that would be reinvested in college aid, this legislation will also direct $10 billion in savings back to the U.S. Treasury to help pay down the deficit.

The full House of Representatives is expected to vote on the bill next week but will most likely vote on it after the August recess.

The advisors at International College Counselors encourage you to contact your congressional representative and tell him or her to support H.R. 3221, the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act (SAFRA)

If you have any other college admissions questions for one of our NYC or Miami college counselors, we’d be happy to answer them. I work with international students (9 countries and counting!) as well as those in the U.S. Please write me here or at my personal email which can be found on my International College Counselors college counseling website.

Mandee Heller Adler, Founder and Principal of International College Counselors

www.internationalcollegecounselors.com

By the way, my college advising company is opening a new branch of International College Counselors in NYC so now you can visit our college advisor NYC as well.

Bright Futures drops 100 percent awards

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

At International College Counselors in Miami, college counselors Mandee Heller Adler and Barry Liebowitz say that  parents and students counting on The Florida Bright Futures Scholarship Program for the 2009-10 academic year need to take notice of the new changes that have come as a result of The 2009 Florida Legislative Session.

The changes to Bright Futures will affect both incoming freshmen and students who started in Florida state schools after fall 2006.

Among other changes, the Program will NOT raise funds to cover the tuition hikes coming this fall.

This means that the FAS award (100%) now covers a fixed amount of $126 per semester hour no matter what Florida schools you attend. This will NOT cover the entire tuition any more. It will not cover the tuition differential nor the 15% increase for the coming year. The difference in cost will need to be covered by students.

Florida Prepaid and other forms of financial aid can be used to cover the costs.

On the website, the word “IMPORTANT” is next to this change:
Students who drop or withdraw from a class paid for by Bright Futures will now have to repay the state the same amount Bright Futures awarded the student per credit hour if the class was dropped after drop/add period. The only exceptions will be based on a verifiable illness or emergency beyond the student’s control. In the past, Florida students have had the ability to drop classes with no penalty other than receiving a W on their transcripts.

According to its web site, Bright Futures will also discontinue the allowance that covered textbooks and other college related expenses.

You don’t have to be a college advisor to know that the students who receive financial aid could potentially be hit the hardest. Depending on a student’s income and the income of his or her parents, the student might not receive enough aid to cover the new costs. If students think they are going to need aid, they should apply early to get the best financial aid package.

The state will be mailing information regarding the changes to the Florida’s Bright Futures Scholarship Program to parents of Florida students this fall. To see the updated information go to the Florida Bright Futures Scholarship Program official website at:

http://www.floridastudentfinancialaid.org/ssfad/bf/

If you have any questions regarding these changes, please contact the Bright Futures office toll-free at 1- 888-827-2004

If you have any other college admissions questions for a college counselor, I’d be happy to answer them. I work with international students (9 countries and counting!) as well as those in the U.S. Please write me here or at my personal email which can be found on my International College Counselors college counseling website.

Mandee Heller Adler, Founder and Principal of International College Counselors

www.internationalcollegecounselors.com

By the way, my college advising company is opening a new branch of International College Counselors in NYC so now you can visit our college advisor NYC as well.

Taking the SAT II – Why? And What’s a Good Score

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

An SAT II Overview

Colleges are increasingly valuing the SAT II Subject Tests. To them, these specific subject exams demonstrate your actual understanding of a subject area, meaning how well you have learned each subject and how prepared you will be for college level courses.

People who don’t consider themselves great test takers, just say Ugh.

The real bottom line: colleges like the SAT II exams because – like all standardized tests – they make the admissions job easier.

When tests are standardized, colleges can easily use them to compare you to other high school students nationwide. Hence, the SAT II. Colleges believe (often quite rightly) the grades you get in high school don’t offer an as accurate measurement. Some high schools are more difficult than others, some teachers are harder graders than others, some students earn extra credit for cleaning out test tubes, all these possible factors leave equally talented students receiving different grades. Standardized tests are the great equalizer.

The tests include: Literature, U.S History, World History, Mathematics Levels I and II, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Chinese, French, German, Spanish, Modern Hebrew, Italian, Latin, Japanese and Korean.

Not all schools require them, so you should check the universities requirements before registering for any SAT II tests.

Each exam is one hour in length. But make sure you study for them more than an hour.

The scores range from 200-800 as in the SAT I.

Taking the SAT II exams

These tests aren’t easy. The best time to take one of the SAT II tests is right after you’ve finished a year long course in that subject. This way the subject matter will still be fresh in your mind. Some exceptions would be if you plan to take the test in Writing, Foreign Language, or Literature. Then you’d want to take the test after the highest level class you plan to take. Of course, there is no point in taking SAT II tests after November of your senior year, everything should be into the college admissions way before then. The only reason to take them this late would be if the colleges you’re applying to use the SAT II for placement purposes.

For the SAT II, you should prepare yourself like you would for the SAT. Get familiar with the format of the tests. Take old exams for practice if you can.

The test dates for SAT II Subject Tests are usually in October, November, December, January, May, and June. However, not every subject test is offered on each of the test dates. To check when the tests you want to take are offered, refer to the College Board website at www.collegeboard.com

International College Counselor Tip: You can take up to three Subject Tests on the same day, but I don’t recommend it. Don’t underestimate the difficulty of these exams. It’s going to be one brain-challenging hour of you life. The ETS won’t let you take the SAT I and the SAT II tests on the same day even if both are offered on the same day.

What do The SAT II Scores Mean?

They can mean different things as the average score varies widely from test to test. In any given year, It’s all about who is taking the tests. Only the top students are taking these tests now because only the most select schools are asking for the scores. This also makes it impossible to compare the tests directly across the different subjects.

The way to think about these scores is that they are part of the student’s story. So, if the student says they are fabulous at math, they should do well on the math subject test. If the student is just a “good” student with nothing really outstanding- these scores speak to that fact.

Here are all the 2008 median scores of college-bound seniors according to the College Board, the wonderful folks who bring you these tests:

English

Literature: 580

History and Social Sciences

United States History: 597

World History: 584

Mathematics

Mathematics Level 1: 599

Mathematics Level 2: 644

Sciences

Biology – Ecological: 593

Biology – Molecular: 630

Chemistry: 635

Physics: 650

Language Tests

Chinese with Listening: 763

French: 620

French with Listening: 624

German: 620

German with Listening: 601

Modern Hebrew: 646

Italian: 671

Japanese with Listening: 693

Korean with Listening: 760

Latin: 624

Spanish: 640

Spanish with Listening: 647

If you have any other college admissions questions for a college counselor, I’d be happy to answer them. I work with international students (9 countries and counting!) as well as those in the U.S. Please write me here or at my personal email which can be found on my International College Counselors college counseling website.

Mandee Heller Adler, Founder and Principal of International College Counselors

www.internationalcollegecounselors.com

By the way, my college advising company is opening a new branch of International College Counselors in NYC so now you can visit our college advisor NYC as well.

Common Application Now Available

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Dear Students, Parents and Friends,

We at International College Counselors want to alert you to the fact that the Common Application is now available online at www.commonap.org

This means students can start to enter their information, and begin their final school essays (supplements too!)

Note to clients of International College Counselors: Please don’t forget to make note of your log in and password, and to send it to us once there is something for us to review.
 
Another note to our clients: The common app can be confusing, please do not hesitate to call or email if you have questions.

A Sample of Additional Application Date Information (taken from the school websites):

University of Michigan: Aug. 2009
Florida State University: Aug. 3, 2009
University of Florida: Early July 2009
University of Texas at Austin: Aug. 1, 2009

For Florida Residents:

Florida Atlantic University (Currently available through www.facts.org)
Florida International University (Currently available through www.facts.org)
Nova Southeastern University (Currently available through www.facts.org)
Florida Gulf Coast University (Currently available through www.facts.org)
University of Central Florida (Currently available through www.facts.org)
University of South Florida (Currently available through www.facts.org)
University of Tampa (Currently available through www.facts.org)

Best regards,
Mandee Heller Adler

If you have any other college admissions questions for a college counselor, I’d be happy to answer them. I work with international students (9 countries and counting!) as well as those in the U.S. Please write me here or at my personal email which can be found on my International College Counselors college counseling website.

Mandee Heller Adler, Founder and Principal of International College Counselors

www.internationalcollegecounselors.com

By the way, International College Counselors is opening a new branch of our company in NYC so now you can visit our college advisor NYC as well.

Making it easier to apply for college aid

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

by Mandee Heller Adler

Thanks to the Obama administration, students and their families will find it easier to apply for financial aid. The forms for the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) are being streamlined to be shorter, simpler and more user friendly. For students and their families, this means, the forms will be easier to complete.

Anyone who has seen the form in the past will tell you, it was truly complicated. Students seeking financial aid for college needed to answer about 150 questions.
Next year’s applicants should see a 20 percent reduction in questions.

Most of the extra questions will be eliminated by avoiding redundancies. For example, students who are at least 24 or older will be able to skip the 11 questions concerning parental financial information. Also, in the simplified FAFSA form, low-income students will be able to skip over the questions about assets, since they aren’t even needed to determine their aid eligibility.

The administration will seek legislation to simplify the form further.

Next year’s form goes online in January. The FAFSA form is necessary to apply for Pell grants, Stafford loans, Perkins loans, work-study programs and much state aid.

Over 16 million students and families apply for federal financial aid every year. The government estimates that 1.5 million potential college students could be eligible for Pell grants but have not applied, perhaps because of the complicated paperwork.

Said Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, “President Obama has challenged the nation to once again have the highest percentage of college graduates in the world. To do that, we need to make the college-going process easier and more convenient, and to send a clear message to young people as well as adults that college is within their reach. Simplifying the financial aid process is an important step toward reaching that goal.”

The full Times article can be seen at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/24/education/24fafsa.html?_r=1

What to Wear to a College Interview

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

It’s summertime and many college bound high school juniors entering their senior year are going to make the most of it by going for summer on-campus interviews.

Many colleges no longer require interviews, but they can give a student the edge if the school is forced to choose between closely matched applicants.

The question then becomes, “What to Wear?”

According to some fashion experts, and this college advisor, students shouldn’t show up in jeans, shorts, tank tops, flip-flops, sandals, Crocs, or anything that ‘s too tight, too short, too sexy or too revealing. Think summer at the country club, and that doesn’t mean the pool.

The key is for a student to dress in a manner that suggests they are serious and that they are taking the meeting seriously. It’s about putting their best foot forward and showing respect, enthusiasm, and interest in a formal atmosphere. It’s also important that they feel comfortable and confident.

For men, a safe list of clothes includes khakis, tie, collared shirt, and jacket. For ladies, a nice blouse, long skirt/pants, and possibly a jacket. Showing a flash of your own style is nice as long as it doesn’t include anything provocative or profane. And, please, clothes do need to be neat, not as if the student fell out of bed and into yesterday’s clothes.

An interviewee should look, not only sound, impressive. The big picture of any student for a school is that this is going to be a representative of them.

Of course, students can always argue that if a college doesn’t like the way they are, maybe the college isn’t for them. Remind them that focusing too much on “being yourself” in an interview can take away from what is far more important to universities, and that is who they will become. After that, you need to trust their common sense. Or bribe them with a quick shopping spree.

Of course, if a prospective college student has a brilliant transcript and sterling SAT scores, those will trump even the scruffiest of looks.

Then again, here are some real no-nos that some college admissions officers swear they’ve seen. Students who:

Arrive barefoot

Obviously haven’t showered in days

Sit on the floor, rather than the chair provided

Put their feet up on either the couch/chair or coffee
table

Pick their noses (or at any part of their body)
during the interview

Swear during the interview

Answer their cell phone and text

Wear their earphones the entire time

Good luck out there! And remember no gum chewing during the college interview!

If you have any other college admissions questions for a college counselor, I’d be happy to answer them. I work with international students (9 countries and counting!) as well as those in the U.S. Please write me here or at my personal email which can be found on my International College Counselors college counseling website.

Mandee Heller Adler, Founder and Principal of International College Counselors

www.internationalcollegecounselors.com

By the way, my college advising company is opening a new branch of International College Counselors in NYC so now you can visit our college advisor NYC as well.

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

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