PORTLAND, Ore. — The $25 million college admissions cheating scheme continues to rattle the world of higher education, but it’s also raising other ethical questions surrounding the process. Some ...
SINCE THE START OF THE WAR. SO WE’VE REACHED THAT TIME OF YEAR WHEN A LOT OF HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS ARE APPLYING FOR EARLY ADMISSION INTO COLLEGES. THE SEARCH PROCESS CAN BE STRESSFUL. STUDENTS AND THEIR ...
The news was as absurd as it was predictable. It was both laugh-out-loud funny and dead serious — a logical development in the long-running auction of prestige that casts America’s upper crust as the ...
Most applicants have their approach to searching for and applying to college all wrong. It is not their fault—we live in an outcome-driven culture where we want to skip right to the answer. The ...
At the Office of Admissions, we love hearing from students and families who have questions about Bucknell. Below, we've collected some of the questions we receive most often. If your question isn't ...
High school counselors are understaffed and overworked, and independent education counselors can be costly. That means students are often on their own with college admissions questions, but ...
The Coalition for College on Tuesday announced that Liz Cheron, a former assistant vice president for enrollment and dean of admissions at Northeastern University, will become the organization’s new ...
In the months ahead, many high school juniors and their families will be researching colleges, visiting campuses, and building application lists. Selecting a college isn’t the ordinary consumer ...
College hopefuls face changing admissions landscape after Supreme Court ruling This fall is the first college application season in which schools are prohibited from considering race and ethnicity ...
If and when you have the opportunity to visit a campus this school year, you need to make the most of it. Talk to a professor in your area of academic interest. Meet with an athletic coach or music ...
“Does It Matter Where You Go to College?” asked the title of a recent article in The Atlantic. It’s an “essential question” for those of us who work as college counselors. How you answer depends on ...
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