Saturday 22 November 2014

How Can Parents Best Support Their Child Through The University Application Process? - Dr Mallika Ramdas

Our Guest Blogger is Dr Mallika Ramdas, Head of University Advising, UWCSEA Dover Campus.  Mallika looks at the role of parents in the University Application Process.

How Can Parents Best Support Their Child Through The University Application Process?


The answer to this question is actually quite a simple one: by letting their child be in the driver's seat of the exploration and decision-making process, by respecting their child's choices, and by engaging in honest and mutually respectful conversations about any constraints (such as financial ones) that may limit the young person's range of options. Happily, universities around the world now offer a wide selection of courses or educational models (single subject, combination courses, liberal arts and sciences, and other variants) to enable students who do have cost, climate, family proximity, or other considerations to find options that would be a good fit for them. 

Most importantly, we believe that parents should be 'a cheer squad, not a nag squad,' in their child's university application process, to quote renowned adolescent expert, Michael Carr-Gregg.  Celebrate your child's aptitudes, abilities, and passions; understand your child's cultural and social preferences and values, or help him or her to explore what those may be; and allow these to shape your child's university selection process.  Sadly, too many young people are made to feel that they simply don't match up to their parents' very high expectations, or even worse, to some external (and often highly questionable) measure of success - the name and fame or ranking of the universities they get into. 

On this note, you may be interested to read a hard-hitting but powerful blog post written by a former ivy-league US university admissions officer and mother, titled 'Parents: let Harvard go.' 

We would also encourage you to read a thought-provoking article written by our very own colleague, Johanna Fishbein, in the forthcoming edition of the College magazineDunia, titled 'Don't Take it Personally: Thought on the Holistic Admissions Process.'

Happy reading, and enjoy supporting your children as they begin the journey towards life beyond school - they're counting on it.

Tuesday 11 November 2014

The IB is your Passport to a World of University options- How to choose? Article by Robbie Jefferiss


Here is a quick article I wrote that will be published later this year in the IB magazine for students. It is a quick guide to searching for a university in the global context and may be useful to our grade 11 students just beginning their research. 

Enjoy, 

Robbie 





If you’re an IB student, you made the right choice. The long hours of work spent on your internal assessments, extended essay, and all the other parts of the IB Diploma are going to pay off.  You will have a passport to a university virtually anywhere in the world.  After two years of the IB program, academically, you’ll be ready for anything they throw at you.   

As the number of IB Diploma Program graduates has grown, so has the number of universities around the world that are eager to enroll IB students.  Why?  Well, research has proven that IB students are simply better prepared for the demands of university level work. Completing an Extended Essay, juggling CAS activities, and studying topics in depth is exactly the types of things you’ll be doing when you’re in university.

Yes you’re prepared, but how will you decide where or what to study at university?  It’s a tough decision, but here are a few tips on how to start your search and find the university that is the best for you….

Know Thyself. 
The students who are most successful when it comes to finding and applying to university are the ones who know what they are looking for- obvious right?   Well, not always. Ask yourself a few of these questions.  What do you value?   Do you value service learning? Sports?  Rigorous academic debates?  Study/Life balance? Social justice?  Music and the Arts? When you’re researching universities you can ask the question, “Does this university value the same things that I do?”  If they do, your application will be music to their ears, because you are seeking the same thing that their university provides.  Like many university advisors have said in the past “finding a university is a match to be made not a prize to be won.” 


Think about the IB subjects you’ve loved and why
There are virtually thousands of topics you can study at university and it’s easy to get overwhelmed when looking at university brochures.  As a starting point, consider why you chose the IB courses you picked. What projects have you enjoyed the most? Was it the marketing project in your IB Business course?  Your Biology dissection lab? Creating your Visual Art portfolio?  What topic did you write your extended essay on and why? All of these things may translate into a possible university course.  If you’re still undecided… that’s OK. More on that next…

Know the system you’re applying to 
Asia, Australia, Scotland, USA, Canada, Europe…  there are so many possibilities when you are an IB Diploma graduate!  However, their systems vary greatly, not only in how they deliver higher education but in how they accept their students.  Let’s take the UK for example. Most UK universities will ask you to pick a course of study, and once you are there, it is likely you will specialize in this subject from day one.  So if you’re the type of student who has known you wanted to be an architect since the day you picked up your first LEGO set, then this might be a good fit.  If you’re undecided on what you might like to study, the U.S. might be the best fit as you generally won’t be asked to pick a “major” subject until your second year, instead focusing on a broad general education, for which, as an IB student, you are already well prepared. Meanwhile, many universities in Asia, Scotland, and Canada, will allow the flexibility to choose a general area to start (Arts or Sciences) and then specialize later on.  Do your homework and investigate the universities and how each program will work, the courses you’ll take, and how you will be assessed in those courses. 

Find out from the admissions offices at those universities you are interested in how you’re evaluated against other candidates. Is it purely on your IB results or IB predictions? Or is it a more “holistic” process, which will include essays and references as part of the applications?  To what extent do the universities want to hear about your extra-curricular activities?

Think carefully about Money. 
It’s a reality that in most parts of the world, Higher Education is expensive. Even if you’re applying to universities in countries where tuition for higher education is free (yes, these countries exist, even if you’re not a national in that country.) you still need to consider living costs and other fees.  Find time when you can have a serious chat with whomever is going to help you finance your university to discuss how you will fund your education. It’s not an easy conversation, but the sooner you have it, the better.  There is nothing worse than having a student get accepted to universities, only to find out later on that it is not financially possible to attend.  If you are going to need financial aid, start the research on this as early as possible.

Don’t get wrapped up in rankings or league tables
Rankings can be very deceiving. Especially when trying to rank universities in different parts of the world. Often times theses rankings are based on the quality and quantity of the research conducted at the university, which is usually conducted at the Master’s or PhD level by top professors whom you might not see much of and doesn’t necessarily translate into good learning experience for first and second year students. If you’re going to use rankings, look for ones that are ranking the best undergraduate teaching, highest student satisfaction, or highest graduation rates; these measures will have a greater significance for you. Meanwhile, you should look at all rankings with some skepticism because (Warning! TOK question coming up).  “To what extent can we truly measure student happiness at university?”

Admissions standards are not a reflection of the overall quality 
If you research a university that has a threshold of 25 points for entry, this doesn’t mean the university is substandard; it may mean that they respect the demands of the IB program and the strength of its graduates.  In fact, some universities in the UK have lowered their IB requirements knowing that IB students are very well prepared.   In some systems, they flip the process. It might be very easy to get in, but you have to 'prove yourself' once you arrive. It's easy to get in, but it's harder to stay. 

Meanwhile, a university that only accepts 10% of its applicants (like the Ivy League universities in the U.S) should not be considered "better" in terms of the quality of program because it is harder to get in- it's simply a matter of numbers and popularity.  There are universities who accept 40-60% of their applicants offering the same high quality of academic program.  



The Big Picture

My students often mock me because I use this expression WAY to much, “Let’s look at the big picture.”   The big picture is that in 3-5 years you want to come out of university and hopefully find a job. You might want to make lots of money, you might want to help others, or you might want to save the world from environmental collapse.  That part is up to you.  The question is what are employers looking for? They want someone who can communicate clearly in writing and in oral presentations, solve problems, work as part of a team, plan, organize and prioritize?  Any of these sound familiar?  Yes, you’re already doing most of them as an IB student right now.  So keep up the good work, keep building these skills, and the rest will take care of itself.

Tuesday 4 November 2014

Timeline and details for the release of the new SAT

There has been a bit of buzz surrounding the CollegeBoard's decision to release a new version of the SAT.  Grade 10 students take note, this will affect the Class of 2017.  At a recent conference the CollegeBoard announced that they would be releasing revised practice tests that will be in line with the new SAT so students can prep for the new exam.

Here is a quick article from our friends at ArborBridge who provide online test prep:



Also, here is a link from the CollegeBoard explaining the difference between the current SAT and the new redesigned SAT: