Jerome Cole: My name is Jerome Cole; I am the Director of College Counseling at the Edinburg School in Washington D.C. I am also the founder of the Cole Educational and Consultant Services; I have a Masters degree in Education and Human Development with specialty in Secondary School Counseling from the George Washington University. For the past seven years I have worked in both public and private school settings, helping students and families, strategies for college. Today I am going to talk about some of the strategies, some of the steps that you and your students should take to determine how you go about selecting a college and then ultimately how you go about being admitted to a college.
Host: What is the first step to getting started with college search process?
Jerome Cole: I think the very first thing that the student and family should do, is to sit down and have a conversation and I think their conversation should be focused on the student. Not on the student and college but on the student, to talk about, who is this person sitting here in front of us? To talk about their likes, their dislikes, To talk about the community where youliving in, things which you like and don t like about it, to think to talk about places that you have lived previously, to talk about past vacation, past experience, relationships, that favorite uncle, that favorite grandparent, what that relationship was like? Why that relationship was special to you? Things that you do well, things that have always been easy to you, as a child I remember, you were always a great reader and you still a lot to this day.
I remember as a child, you were always a great, whatever it is. I think it s important to start there, because what you are trying to do is to get the student to look inward, to think about him or herself, who am I? What do I want? What things are important to me? That s where the process starts. It doesn t starts with, do you want to go through a large school versus a small school, it doesn t start with, do you want to go to school in the mid-west versus the south versus the east, it starts inward, looking inward, what do you want, who are you, what do you like, what s easy, okay? So, I think that if you start there, then the next step is to go and to start to visit colleges and I would recommend that you do that on a local area and on a local basis in other words, if you are based in Washington D.C. don t put the kid on a plane and fly to Chicago or Los Angeles.Stay it in D.C., look at the local schools in D.C., not for the sake of trying to identify a school that s right for you but just the idea of going and visiting those colleges campuses and getting familiar what this whole idea, this whole concept of leaving high school and going to college.
A 17 year old thinks they know what colleges? But, they really don t and so that s why you want to start out by visiting schools. The third thing that you want to do is you want to sit down with a counselor. Go to your high school, schedule a meeting with that high school counselor and start to talk about yourself, what your needs are, what your wants are, what you are dream and hopes are? And then integrate college into the conversation.
So, that s what I would say in terms of a first step, is to conversation with mom and dad and people around you, who know you and love you.
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