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College Visits Whys & Hows

I received so many questions and comments on my last article about college visits that I wanted to follow up on a couple of items: Why should you make visits a priority and how can you visit a number of schools. The first point I’d make is this: It doesn’t matter which schools you visit. You will learn something that will inform your college selection process at every school you visit, even if it’s just “I don’t want to go to a school that _____.”

Most students seem to start from the point of majors offered, geography, small vs large, and (hopefully) affordability and then impute the general awesomeness of a large community of people their age and no parents. But that won’t narrow the field enough, or expand it either. (One of my favorite comments from our tour was from a Tufts admissions director: “We talk a lot about finding a school that’s a fit for you, but you should also remember that the purpose of college is to get outside your comfort zone.”)

Here are some comments and learnings that stuck with us from our college tours, none of which was anything we necessarily would have come up with on our own:

None of these is right or wrong in and of itself, but most of them are things we probably would not have come up with on our own. The best part is, you don’t have to travel cross-country to find out about things like this– chances are you have a few schools in your immediate area that you can visit to see more of the nuances of student life. And much of the above info came from schools neither of my kids are interested in but that we’re grateful to for providing a lens for more thorough evaluation.

The next piece is, how do you visit schools? I know that not everyone can take a week and travel all over. We were fortunate to have people willing to open up their guest rooms for us most places, but it was still an expensive trip. Here’s a dirty secret: my daughter has a twin brother and I have not taken him on a single college visit. Here’s the better part of that: He’s visited at least as many colleges as she has. Between the two of them, they’ve done upwards of 30 college visits. Here’s how:

There are lots of other options too. Groups of schools in a single geographical area often offer joint programs during a week of the summer where they’ll do more than just tours for prospective students. Most schools offer some form of summer or after-school program.

The bottom line is, you have opportunities to visit colleges even if you aren’t in a position to travel to see them. And it’s worth visiting some schools you’re not interested in– at a minimum you may learn what it is you’re not interested in so that you can apply that to your college screening.

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