Showing posts with label College. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College. Show all posts

Monday, April 01, 2024

Trivium and Quadrivium

The reason I've always been captivated by the Trivium and Quadrivium is almost certainly that these ancient western educational models happen to coincide with six main interests of mine: math, music, astronomy/cosmology, logic, writing, and debate. 

Moreover, philosophy, another one of my main interests, was considered such an obvious part of classic liberal arts training that it wasn't included in the list of subjects for either the Quadrivium or Trivium.

From the Wikipedia article on Quadrivium:

"From the time of Plato through the Middle Ages, the quadrivium (plural: quadrivia[1]) was a grouping of four subjects or arts—arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy—that formed a second curricular stage following preparatory work in the trivium, consisting of grammar, logic, and rhetoric. Together, the trivium and the quadrivium comprised the seven liberal arts,[2] and formed the basis of a liberal arts education in Western society until gradually displaced as a curricular structure by the studia humanitatis and its later offshoots, beginning with Petrarch in the 14th century. The seven classical arts were considered "thinking skills" and were distinguished from practical arts, such as medicine and architecture."

One has to wonder what our society would look like if schools prioritized these essential subjects in grades K-12.

St. Ann Classic Academy is a school trying to implement such a curriculum.

For an excellent book on the Quadrivium, try Quadrivium: The Four Classical Liberal Arts of Number, Geometry, Music, & Cosmology. 

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Friday, March 01, 2024

U.S. News State Educational Rankings

U.S. News is famous for its annual college rankings, but it also ranks states on a number of educational benchmark
s. Their recent College Readiness Rankings are a revelation.

Not surprisingly, Northeastern states occupy half of the first 10 spots. 

California? Number 49. Ouch.

When I was schooled as a boomer kid, California public schools were the best in the country – and, therefore, the best in the world. Number 49 is very hard to take.

Annual U.S. News college rankings (and others) are notorious as less-than-stellar indicators of college caliber. But they do, at least, provide a sense of relative quality. Similarly, one should probably take these overall educational rankings of the 50 states with a large grain of salt.

Nevertheless, if you'd like to see them, click here for the complete state rankings.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Thursday, December 01, 2022

Don't Save for College (In Your Child's Name)

Saving for college is widely seen as something good and noble that all parents should attempt to do. 
And saving for college is good and noble – but it should be done in the right way.

Unless you're able to pay cash for college and your student won't need financial aid to attend, do NOT save money in your child's name. Doing so will only reduce the student's financial aid award.

In calculating awards, parental assets and student assets must be reported. The problem is that student assets have a far greater negative impact on the calculation than parental assets do.

Every additional $100 in student assets reported reduces financial aid by roughly $25, whereas an increase in reported parental assets decreases financial only $6.

Save for college, yes, but put those savings in a separate, dedicated account in the parents' names – not in any kind of student-named fund.

There's no reason to give away financial aid money!

Be smart, and save for college in a dedicated non-student investment vehicle.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Saturday, October 01, 2022

50 Dangerous Things

Were you a "free-range kid?"

Free-Range Kids are largely left alone to explore the world independently. That includes trying things out, making mistakes, finding joy in exploration and experimentation, getting hurt on occasion, surviving those occasions, learning from errors, and growing up confident and competent in handling oneself.

We boomers were free-range kids. Gone after school until sunset and dinner time, off doing who knows what, who knows where, with whomever we pleased. 

Riding bikes miles away and speeding downhill in t-shirts, jeans, and flip-flops with no helmets (bike helmets weren't yet a thing; we wouldn't have worn them anyway). Cimbing across tall hills, shooting BB guns at soda cans, throwing rocks and clods of dirt at each other (and getting hit, painfully, on occasion). Exploring underground rain tunnels and coming up out of manholes, scaling tall school buildings after dark, hiking cross-country in Boy Scouts with only a map and compass, etc. All this was unremarkable and everyday.

Along these lines, 50 Dangerous Things (You Should Let Your Children Do) is medicine for modern parental paranoia. 

From the amazon description:

"In a time when children are too often coddled, reminds readers that climbing trees is good for the soul, and that a pocket knife is not a weapon. Full of exciting ways children can explore the world around them, this book explains how to “Play with Fire” and “Taste Electricity” while learning about safety. With easy-to-follow instructions, it includes:

• Activities, like walking a tightrope

• Skills, like throwing a spear

• Projects, like melting glass

• Experiences, like sleeping in the wild

As it guides you through these childlike challenges and more, the book will inspire the whole household to embrace a little danger."

Other recommended "dangerous" activities include learning to whittle, tie knots, make fires, stand on the roof, find beehives, go underground, perform on the street, cross town on public transit, sleep in the wild, make a rope swing, climb a tree, play with dry ice, drop from high places, and more.

Along the same lines, I recommend The Coddling of the American Mind, by Jonathan Haidt.

Haidt's book picks up where 50 Dangerous Things leaves off, and elucidates how unnecessarily frightened helicopter parenting – smothering kids with constant supervision – is actually far more harmful to young people than allowing them to take calculated risks and build confidence and independence in the process.

An important book for over-anxious parents raised by over-anxious parents.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Monday, August 01, 2022

Get a Head Start

A head start in life is a great advantage, and nowhere is this more clear than in the educational realm.

For example, any parent with a good high school education can teach his or her child to read at a very early age. See: Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons.

Likewise, any child who can draw stick figures with a crayon can learn to form letter shapes.

Simple mathematical concepts can be taught as soon as a child can count. Counting objects is the first step in acquiring "number sense," a visceral feel for numbers essential to mastering mathematics. The goal of all early math education should be the development, strengthening, and maintenance of number sense, along with the ability to do accurate mental and paper/pencil calculations and estimates. These aims should be ardently pursued and achieved in grades K-6.

Parents can work with eager children at home to provide them an early start. My own daughter was reading at age four, mastering math facts at five, operating with negative numbers at six, typing at seven, and doing algebra at eight.

Not all parents are professional academic tutors, as I am. Still, it doesn't take much forethought for most parents to provide their children a leg up in their schooling.

For those who wish to have professional guidance, I offer private consulting for parents of young children. In addition to providing general information about schools, early education, and tutoring at home, I help parents design and implement individualized, age-appropriate academic head start plans tailored to each child's particular needs and interests. You can contact me here for more information about this unique service.

An good head start is a great gift, one of the best parents can offer their children.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 01, 2022

The Great American Bathroom Books

Imagine a single-volume guide to a classic liberal arts education. You get essentially that in The Great American Bathroom Books, Volume 2.

Containing two-page thumbnails of all-time great written works, readers get a taste of famous titles without having to invest hours in the process. Single-sitting synopses are well-organized and well-written. Think of each as a summary of a summary, a shortened "Cliff Notes." 

Volumes 1-3 include main plot points, central themes, and condensed analysis of classic works of literature, important novels and plays, and popular recent non-fiction titles. All but Volume 3 are out of print. Read the second volume, first.

But a good used copy on amazon here or eBay here.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Saturday, January 01, 2022

When Adult Children Send Parents on Vacation

One of the joys of parenthood is when you travel halfway around the world on premium plane tickets bought for you by your now adult daughter who paid for them with spare money she’s earned after going through the American high school and college meat grinders and coming out the other side with a senior job working for a top 10 tech company along with a wonderful husband and beautiful baby girl and close family members in five countries on four continents.

Enough said.

But I’ll say more.

There are moments when one realizes it’s worth it. To struggle and worry and win and lose and strive and push and crawl in the dark without a “how to” manual or the slightest assurance of success for years and years to bring to your child something that you, yourself, never had. What I always needed, but never received, was the reliable backup, love, and guidance that only a father can provide. But I did give that to our daughter. Together with the font of light and love and fine example of womanhood provided by her mother, it seems to have worked well.

The parenting my wife and I gave our daughter was far from anything resembling perfect. But it was good enough. And that’s good enough, apparently.

No one knows the future, and that's fine. No pressure. The point is that I was able to discharge my duty as a dad. And it feels good to know that.

[Girl in the picture not our actual daughter.]

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Thursday, April 01, 2021

Major for Money, Minor for Love

Once upon a time, in the days when college was affordable for virtually everyone, a simple part-time job was all it took to pay tuition, room, board, books, and fees. In the olden days, the best advice was: “Follow your passion. Study what you love, and the money will follow.” 

Nowadays, that’s bad advice. Undergraduate degrees are beyond expensive, and graduate degrees are even more costly. Stories are rife about college students racking up huge debts chasing degrees that don’t lead to jobs lucrative enough to pay them off.

Crippling costs of post-secondary education make it unlikely or impossible for many students to move up the social ladder. Without much (or any) disposable income left over after paying basic expenses and college loan payments, many young adults have little to look forward to in life beyond renting, penny-pinching, and dealing with the stress of living paycheck to paycheck.

For nearly all young people today, I believe the best advice is: Major for money, minor for love. 

Before we go any further, it’s important to understand three SAT words: vocation, avocation, and amateur.

A vocation is a primary job. It’s the work you do to earn a living, a professional pursuit, a step along a rewarding career path.

An avocation is work you do for fun, in your spare time. It’s a hobby, essentially. Something you do for the pure love of doing it.

An amateur is a person who works hard to excel at a beloved activity while receiving no monetary reward for doing so. For many years, the Olympic Games were open only to amateur athletes, those training and competing for no other reason than personal satisfaction and love of their sport.

My advice is to major in a field of study that will pay good money and provide you with a good job that you won’t hate. Find a lucrative field you can excel in, one that doesn’t turn your stomach, and put most of your time into advancing your skills in this direction. At the same time, minor in a different field simply for the sake of immersing yourself in that which fascinates you. In your spare time, recharge your spirit by doing what you truly love. 

Major in accounting, minor in creative writing. Major in business, minor in dance. Major in statistics, minor in Italian. Major in nursing, minor in psychology. Major in AI, minor in art history.

You may not want to turn something you love into a vocation, anyway. Do you really want to make your passion a day-to-day struggle?

Imagine your passion is creative writing. How would you honestly feel about having to deal with marketing hassles, constant criticism and rejection, stifling commercialism, and unforgiving deadlines that fill the lives of professional writers? Do you realize how much competition there is for the vanishingly small number of well-paying spots in such a field? How long it takes to rise through the ranks, earning almost nothing in the meantime? Is it worth it? The stress involved could well destroy your passion for writing.  

Instead, engage in your passion on the side, part-time, as a hobby. Do your own thing on your own terms, simply for the love of doing it. Be an amateur, not a professional. Instead of spending most of your days battling with the many frustrating and soul-crushing aspects of life as a professional writer, join online writing circles, groups of other aspiring amateur writers, and enjoy sharing and improving your work on an informal, part-time basis with an appreciative audience of like-minded people.

Spend most of your time doing something that feeds your wallet, and some regular time on that which feeds your soul. 

You’ll avoid the tremendous stress associated with being chronically debt-ridden and cash-strapped while getting maximum pleasure out of the activity you most enjoy in life.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Monday, March 01, 2021

Patti Smith at Wesleyan 2016

My daughter graduated with degrees in mathematics and computer science from Wesleyan University in 2016. She's now a senior software engineer at Meta, well married, with a healthy and happy first baby, our first grandchild.

Can you tell I'm proud?

I'll never forget her graduation ceremony. Sitting in the audience, I was nervously flipping through the program, not paying much attention to anything in particular. Time passed slowly, as more and more parents and loved ones filled the chairs facing the stage in front of the beautiful Wesleyan library. Eventually, things got under way.

And then ... that voice!

I recognized it instantly as that of a musical hero of mine, the venerable Patti Smith. Not more than a few words into her talk, I knew it was her. What more fitting a way to mark my daughter's college graduation than with the spoken words of this particular poet extraordinaire:

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I was dreaming in my dreaming 

Of an aspect bright and fair

And my sleeping, it was broken

But my dream it lingered near.

In the form of shining valleys

Where the pure air rarified

And my senses newly opened

And I awakened to the cry.

That the people have the power,

The people have the power.

And where there were deserts,

I saw fountains and like cream the waters rise

And we strolled there together

With none to laugh or criticize.

And the leopard and the lamb

Lay together truly bound

I was hoping in my hoping

To recall what I had found.

I was dreaming in my dreaming

God knows a purer view

But as I surrender to my sleeping

I commit my dream to you.

That the people have the power

To redeem the work of fools

Upon the meek the graces shower

It’s decreed the people rule.

And I believe that everything we dream

Can come to pass

Through our union we can turn the world around

We can turn the earth’s revolution.

For the people have the power,

The people of the power.

Graduates, you are the future, and the future is now.

Congratulations.

Thank you.

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Read the article in The Wesleyan Connection and watch the video here.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Friday, January 01, 2021

Pick Three: Academics, Sports, Free Time, Sleep

In my day, we somehow managed to get a good education, do required homework, get plenty of sleep, and have lots of time left over for sports, jobs, interests, and all kinds of social activities. Most of my peers did most of it, and quite a few did it all. 

I don’t know exactly what happened, but that’s certainly not the norm for college bound high school students, anymore.

Nowadays, with all the time it seems to take to be competitive for a seat at a good college, it’s normal for serious students to be sleep-deprived.

Studying is important. But there’s a point at which more time spent studying hurts your GPA more than it helps. Lack of sleep will eventually become harmful to memory, creativity, thinking, reading, writing, and other mental and physical processes necessary to do good academic work.

Growing teenagers need a good nine hours of sleep per night. When I ask students how much sleep they’re getting, the answer is generally in the neighborhood of six to seven hours per night. That’s not enough. And it matters. Adding just one hour of sleep per night could significantly improve your energy levels, cognitive functioning, mood, and academic performance. 

[First of all, it's worth asking if you're pursuing the right goal. A top college should be only your goal for the right reasons. Your reasons. There are other good options. You really do not have to do this, if you don't want to. Only you can decide if the path to a top college is right for you. Having said that, I'll assume you've rationally chosen that path, for yourself, for the right reasons, and are looking for ways to make the trip as productive and frictionless as possible.]

Under-disciplined but otherwise ambitious students today can pick three of the following four desirables: academic success, sports, free time, and sleep. All may seem essential. How do you pick just three?

First, choose reasonable sleep time on a regular basis, and some downtime to go with it. Without your health, nothing else matters, and little else can be accomplished. This should be non-negotiable.

That leaves academic success, and sports/extracurriculars. Academic success is the whole purpose of the undertaking, so pick that.

Now what? No sports or extracurriculars? 

Maybe not. Is baseball really that important? Band? Volunteering? Sometimes the answer will be “No, not that important.” Other times it might be “HELL YES, that’s extremely important.”

So, what’s the answer, then? Can't I have it all? 

The answer is a qualified "yes, you can" and the not-so-secret ingredient is self discipline. 

To have it all you’ll need to become very good at making tough choices and sacrificing the small stuff. ALL the small stuff.

The word “No” will become a very close friend. You must learn to say “no” to just about anything and everything unimportant. Sometimes a nap may be a good idea; other times, not. You may want to do two sports simultaneously, but is it worth the hit to your academics?

You’ll need to become a master planner. You’ll need to be motivated and organized. Deliberately set things up so you’ll get things done and get enough sleep. No slouching. No this, no that. That's a lot of no.

Luckily, the things you'll need to refuse are probably things you don't want to do anyway, if you think about it in light of what's important and valuable and rewarding to you.

It’s time to grow up. That’s really all it is. Childhood is basically over. No free lunch. Go out there and pay your dues.

Chances are quite good the effort will be well worth it.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, December 01, 2020

History of the SAT and ACT

Test nerds and prep professionals already know about this site, which outlines in some detail the history of the SAT and ACT from the late 19th century to the present day. 

Information provided covers the founding of the College Board, the fits and starts and many early and late iterations of the SAT, the inception of the test prep industry in 1946 (Stanley Kaplan), the beginnings of the ACT in 1959, and a great deal more.

It’s a fascinating read for anyone with more than a passing interest in American college entrance tests.

Bibliographic notes are found at the end of the article (though most are not linked).

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Sunday, November 01, 2020

Take Professors, Not Courses

In college, you can, with some limitations, choose not only your courses but also your professors. And, arguably, before you choose a major, professors can be more important than courses. 

Using ratemyprofessors.com, students can find the best professors in every department at most colleges and universities in the U.S. Look up your school, and browse the reviews of the most highly rated instructors for things that pique your interest and intuition. Ignore the department. Just find and read about the best professors in the entire college. Even if you’ve never had any interest in a particular field of study, think about taking the professor, not the course. 

Art History? Economics? Astronomy? Shakespeare? Latin-American Studies? Italian? Anthropology? The Mathematics of Gambling? Figure Drawing? Pure Land Buddhism? Botany 101?

The reviews you read about this or that professor may persuade you to take certain classes based on his or her outstanding reputation, particular comments left by other students, and your own instincts.

Great professors change lives. And great schools have great professors. Find them. Work with them. See where it takes you.

You may be surprised – and pleased.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, April 01, 2020

Surest Way to Destroy Your Score

It never ceases to amaze me that students will spend time and effort prepping for a test like the ACT or SAT and then go out and stay out late with friends the night before the big test. 

Please … promise me you won’t do that.

The best way to ruin your SAT/ACT score – by far – is to not have enough sleep the night before you take the test.

In fact, one good night’s sleep isn’t really enough. You should get plenty of sleep on each of the two nights immediately before test day. Three nights would be best.

Plan your week so that you’ll be able to go to bed early and get plenty of sleep the last two or three nights before taking your test. Get ahead on any papers or presentations due and study in advance for upcoming tests or other assessments.

You’ve put in a lot of hard work in preparation for this. Whatever you do, get good sleep, and be well-rested when you take the exam.

P.S. The next best way to destroy your score is to be dehydrated. Make sure to drink a lot of water each of the last two days before test day, and a full glass that morning. Don't forget to use the bathroom before leaving for the test site.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Friday, February 01, 2019

ratemyprofessors.com

Until you declare a major, take highly-rated professors, not classes!

Think of ratemyprofessors.com as Yelp for college professors. Search for your school (or prospective schools), and get reviews and ratings by real students of instructors in all departments. Use the site to find life-changing teachers and avoid duds.

Some reviews are more helpful than others, and as is the case with other review sites, ratemyprofessors.com doesn’t tell the whole story. But with quantified measures like "Overall Quality" and "Level of Difficulty" (among other indicators) it’s a whole lot better than having no idea at all as to which teachers are likely to be golden and which should probably be avoided like the plague.

Most/all established professors at are listed at each institution, and university-wide averages give you some idea as to the quality and collective personality of various faculties.

Schools are rated by students according to other important factors, as well (e.g. reputation, happiness, food, facilities, location, social life, etc.), providing useful comparative data.

As an example, click here to see data for Wesleyan University.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Saturday, December 01, 2018

101 Things to Do Before You Graduate

Life Coach Julian Gordon has published an indispensable book for college freshman:

101 Things to Do Before You Graduate.

Listing 101 truly useful and important academic and personal goals to fulfill as an undergrad, Gordon gives callow freshmen a roadmap to follow to make the most of their college years.

Those four undergraduate years will be over before you know it, and with them will disappear once-in-a-lifetime opportunities. Don’t waste some of the most important and potentially profitable and enjoyable years of your life! 

This book makes a great gift. Should be required reading for every college-bound high school senior. Slightly out-of-date, but still a fantastic font of fabulous ideas for undergrads. 

UPDATE: Great TED talk given by Jullien on the 4.0 GPA That Really Matters.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Friday, June 01, 2018

Fractal Coloring Book

Adult coloring books have become popular in recent years. A number have been published already, and more are finding there was to amazon all the time. Below are my favorites:

Coloring Mandalas for Meditation was a hit with my daughter and her friends at Wesleyan who needed to periodically take a break from the stress of studying.

Adult Coloring Book: Fractals by Ben Trube not only offers beautiful fractal designs to color, but also provides a visceral experience with fractals and the math behind them.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Thursday, February 01, 2018

How Hard Would You Work for an Extra $1 million?

It's no secret that a top-notch college education confers valuable special advantages to those fortunate, talented, and diligent enough to obtain one, including: superior instruction; well-connected networks of professors and alums; preferred access to coveted internship, research, and employment opportunities; etc.

Let's assume that landing a seat at a top school rather than an average school means you're able to increase your month salary $1000, on average, over the course of your working lifetime, and that this allows you to save an extra $500 per month, on average, for 40 years at 6% real growth.

That's an extra $1 million in present value purchasing power once you hit retirement. And these dollar numbers are conservative. You could quite easily double them, in the right jobs and fields.

That's a completely different life, not only for you, but for those who come after you.

Now are you motivated?

In general, the best thing you can do to increase the probability of admission to top schools is standardized test prep and college application essay prep. Assuming you're already taking the toughest classes you can and are getting the best grades you can, time spent maximizing your SAT/ACT scores and nailing the various common app, personal statement, and supplemental essays you'll write for your college applications will do far more to improve your College Application Marketability than anything else you could possibly do.

Once again, there are no guarantees. A hot diploma doesn't mean anything by itself, and students unable to gain entrance to a top 30 school can make up for most/all of that advantage with extra grit, hard work, dedication, and perseverance.

Still, it's worth it to aim high. Go for 100%! Then celebrate the result, whatever it is. Use failures as feedback, as opportunities to recalibrate the machine.

Werner Erhard taught that life is a summit-less mountain to climb. Every time you reach the top, there's a taller peak not too far off in the distance. As he would often say, "Best to learn to love climbing!"

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Monday, January 01, 2018

College Application Marketability (CAM)

Several factors are involved in the evaluation of college admission applicants. The following is a rough approximation of the relative importance college admission committees assign to basic elements of a typical application:

* Coursework (grades and rigor): 40%

* SAT/ACT test scores: 30%

* Essays (Common App, personal statements, supplements, etc.): 15%

* Everything else (extracurriculars, leadership, legacy, ethnicity, etc.): 15%

Let’s assume that an average honors or AP-level high school course requires about eight hours of work per week (four hours in class, and four hours outside class). Assuming six classes and 36 weeks of school per year, that’s 1728 schoolwork hours per year for the typical college-bound high school student. By the end of junior year, that’s 5184 academic hours. Just to be safe, let’s round down to 4,800 hours. That’s 120 hours per CAM point.

Suppose a student spends an average of two hours per week over the course of 12 months preparing for the SAT. This requires a total investment of 104 hours. To be safe, lets round up to 120 hours. That’s only four hours per CAM point.

Similarly, time invested in planning, drafting, editing, and polishing college application essays is hugely profitable! Let’s assume the average student needs to write one 1000-word Common App essay and eight 500-word supplemental essays and personal statements; that’s nine college application essays totaling 5000 words. To do an outstanding job on these critical pieces of academic work might require 75 hours. That’s only five hours per CAM point.

The takeaway:

Making a serious commitment to long-term standardized test prep and to putting in the time and effort required to write great college essays is highly intelligent!

Yes, of course, you should do all you can to take the toughest courses and get the very best grades possible. You do need to show sincere interest in your favorite schools, committed involvement and initiative in pursuing extracurricular activities for your own enjoyment and in service of others, and accomplishment of notable NTA's ("non-teenage activities").

And, of course, there are only so many hours in the day. Nothing on Earth is more important than maintaining good mental and physical health, properly balancing work and play, and getting enough rest and sleep. You can't do your best work if you're sick, unhappy, or exhausted.

Notwithstanding these important considerations, the fact remains that work on test prep and college essays is up to 30 times more productive than anything else the typical high school student can do to maximize CAM and boost the odds of admission to a top school.

Imagine that you’re taking an additional half-course called “CAM Class” throughout junior year and during the first semester of senior year. The content of this independent study course will consist mainly of your own research into “good fit” colleges, standardized test prep, college essay work, and general college application planning and preparation. You’ll put far less time into CAM Class than you would into any ordinary course – but your devoted participation here has the potential to do far more for your chances of gaining entrance to the college of your dreams than do all the other courses you’re currently taking put together!

This is an incredible opportunity for those committed students willing to step up, embrace the challenge, and make a relatively small sacrifice of time and energy in exchange for the excitement, fulfillment, and future success that only a great college education can provide. It’s smart to commit yourself to building the best college application package you can by working diligently to maximize your score on the SAT or ACT and nail your college application essays.

Make a plan to investigate various colleges and universities that match your goals and fit your personality, prepare thoroughly for the SAT or ACT, write and finely polish your college essays, and complete and fine-tune your college applications well ahead of time. If you can, find a qualified test prep coach and private college counselor to help you along the way. If this isn’t possible, you can do quite well working entirely on your own – without paying for any outside help at all – simply by reading good books on these subjects, researching online, putting in the time, and becoming a test prep wizard and college application expert through self-study.

Summing up:

There’s no better investment than the time and energy required to earn an “A” in CAM Class.

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Friday, December 01, 2017

MOOCs are Coming of Age

At their inception several short years ago, MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) were an unproven concept with passionate advocates on opposite sides of a great debate. MOOCs were going to revolutionize higher ed, or destroy it. No one could tell which it would be.

A decade later, top MOOC providers like Coursera and EdX have grown and prospered. Top-notch course offerings by the best universities in the world have attracted millions of students world-wide. Legions of online pupils of all ages have completed courses, some earning coveted professional certificates and even fully-accredited graduate degrees online. Low cost has made high quality higher ed available to a much wider, world-wide audience.

Though forms are still evolving and the precise roles to be played by MOOCs are still uncertain, both the radically new concept and the traditional educational landscape have survived and even thrived as a result of the introduction and mainstreaming of MOOCs.

Today, MOOCs and associated certificates/degrees are legitimate educational alternatives.

See links below for further info:

Massive Open Online Course (WikiPedia)

By the Numbers: MOOCs in 2017

The Future of MOOCs

Coursera

Coursera Professional Certificates

Coursera Undergrad and Grad Degrees

EdX

EdX MicroMasters Certificates

EdX Professional Certificates

EdX Series Programs

MIT Open Courseware

Stanford Online

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Copyright © 2006-present: Christopher R. Borland. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, November 01, 2017

Take College Classes While in High School

There are a number of very good reasons to take college classes while in high school (this is called "Dual Enrollment").

1. A's in college-level work look good on college applications.

2. Advance placement could save you valuable time and money in college (students may earn enough extra units to earn their undergrad degree in just three years, allowing them to begin careers or grad school well ahead of schedule).

3. You can get pesky general education requirements out of the way while trying out various ideas for majors, so that once you're at your dream school you can make the most your tuition dollars by taking upper-division courses freshman year and exploring or developing majors early.

4. Advanced high schoolers may be feeling like they've had enough of high school, and will be invigorated by dipping their toes into a more intellectual environment, interacting with college professors and students, etc.

5. Your academic work does double-duty this way, earning both high school credits and college units at the same time, so you can take fewer high school classes senior year (you might even be able to leave campus at lunchtime).

If you have a junior college near home, chances are you can take courses there as a junior or senior in high school. Local four-year colleges may also allow you to take courses for college and high school credit simultaneously. 

WARNING:

Colleges and departments often place arcane restrictions on the transfer of college credit earned before matriculation. Be sure to check with your high school counselor, the registrar at your local college, and relevant departments at the schools to which you'll be applying for admission – to be absolutely sure of the credits you'll be earning – before enrolling in college courses while still in high school.

After graduating high school in 2011, our daughter took a gap year before attending Wesleyan University, and took two semesters of junior college calculus during that year off. Before enrolling in the JC courses, she called the Wesleyan registrar and confirmed that yes, the two JC calculus courses would, in fact, be counted for credit at Wesleyan. Once she got to Wesleyan, however, and decided to major in mathematics, the math department head refused to count her "A" grade in JC multi-variable calculus toward her math major at Wes! The JC course would be counted for graduation, but not toward the requirements for the math major. So, she had to retake the course at Wesleyan. As it turns out, the Wesleyan math department would have accepted for full credit within the major any upper division math courses taken at a four-year college. Had our daughter known this ahead of time, she could easily have taken the 3D calculus course at Sonoma State University, just 15 minutes from home, rather than at the local JC.

I had a student several years ago who a similar experience at Amherst. He earned a 5 in AP calculus AB in high school, but nevertheless had to retake the course at Amherst, due to restrictions on college credit earned at other schools.

With proper forethought and requisite caution, taking college courses while in high school can be a wonderful opportunity to stretch intellectual boundaries, boost applications, fulfill requirements, save money, and investigate prospective majors ahead of time.

Do your due diligence, check early with all parties involved (including heads of relevant departments), get promises of credit in writing (via email), and you should have no unhappy surprises.

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