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College Recruiting
This web page serves
as a resource for high school swimmers who aspire to continue
their competition as they move on to the college or university
scene. It contains a great deal of information regarding
scholarships and the various levels of NCAA and other Collegiate
Athletic Organizations. In addition, at very the bottom of the
page, are a number of "Useful
Links" to other relevant websites.
The best place to
begin is to locate the results from a collge conference's year
end meet. That will help you get an idea of where you would fit
into their program. Remember, most conferences have limits on
the number of swimmers and divers that a team can take to the
conference meet (typically 16-18 swimmers for each men's and
women's teams). Thus, if the team is quite large find out about
the conference limits unless swimming at a conference meet is
not a concern for you. From the conference meet, most colleges
go to one of the NCAA Swimming Championships (Division I, II, or
III), the NAIA Championships, or the National Junior College
Championships. You can get the latest NCAA Championship Time
Standards from the USA
Swimming website. Remember, the "A" NCAA standard does not
necessarily guarantee you entry into the meet. Most NCAA
championships are limited to a specific number of swimmers in
each event. The fastest swimmers get into the event, and some
may be left out even if they achieve the "A" standard. The "B"
standard lets you into an event if you are in the meet with an
"A" cut or entered as part of a relay. You can also find the
latest NCAA Championship meet information and results by
visiting the
All
Sports Swimming Championship website.
Another good place
to check for college swim programs is the
Directory of American Colleges and Universities. Click on a
State and then visit all the colleges from that state. At each
college, look around for Athletics and see if they have a swim
program. These general university and college sites might also
help you get an idea of admissions requirements and scholarship
opportunities. Remember, in Division I and II, schools can offer
scholarships for swimming but the total amount of scholarship
money available is limited to approximately nine (9) full-time
out-of-state scholarships for each school. This money is often
distributed among many swimmers. In addition, the money your
child receives in academic aid will also count towards the
university or college's swimming scholarship amount.
One place you'll
want to be sure to check is the
NCAA website.
You'll find answers to many of your questions regarding academic
eligibility, financial aid, recruiting, and graduation rates,
just to name a few. And as the president of the NCAA advises,
start your college career by asking lots of questions. Find out
if you're on track to meet academic eligibility and core-course
requirements. See what the graduation rate of the athletics
programs and the athletes in your sport are at the colleges in
which you are interested. Ask what academic support services are
available and how academic progress is tracked.
Articles you may
find worth reading:
What Coaches Want:
Traits most coaches look for in a swimmer.
Marketing Yourself:
How to standout from the competition.
Tips for Choosing the Right College:
Finding the right fit for you.
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NCAA:
The National Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA), is a non-profit association comprised of more than
1260 schools and conferences. The NCAA membership is divided
into three legislative and competitive Divisions (I, II,
and III). Colleges select, and apply for a classification
level that best meets their institutions educational and
athletic mission. There are currently 1006 active member
schools, 325 in Division I, 270 in Division II, and 411 in
Division III. The most notable difference between the
divisions is that Division I and II institutions may offer
athletic scholarships while Division III schools do not
offer athletic scholarships.
Division I:
NCAA
Division I institutions are comprised primarily of large schools
with enrollments that range from 3,500-50,000+ students. College
institutions in this classification can, if they choose to,
offer athletic scholarships for student athletes. The NCAA sets
the number of full athletic scholarships a school can fund.
Presently the limits for Division I swimming scholarships is as
follows:
Women's Scholarships: 14
Men's Scholarships: 9.9
Number of Division I Swimming Programs: Women's Programs: 188;
Men's Programs: 140
Athletic scholarships are limited to one year and can be renewed
annually for up to five years out of a six-year period. "There
is no such award as a four year scholarship." Athletic aid can
be increased, reduced or even canceled annually. Programs may
offer full scholarships (includes tuition, room, board, fees and
books) or any type of partial aid such as tuition only or money
for books. The total financial aid package (athletic
scholarships, grants, student loans, booster club or civic
scholarships) an athlete can receive cannot not exceed the total
cost for attending an institution for one year.
Ivy League Conference:
Ivy League member institutions include the following: Brown,
Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton
and Yale. These Division I programs do not offer athletic
scholarships and acceptance to any of these institutions is
based upon a rigid academic standard. All Ivy League student
athletes are rated upon an Academic Index rating scale that each
member institution must follow. Students are rated based upon
their G.P.A., Class Rank, College Board SAT and ACT Scores, high
school course load, and community service involvement. Financial
aid awards are offered after a student athlete has been accepted
on a need based assessment that has no bearing whether a student
will be accepted or not.
Division II:
NCAA
Division II institutions are comprised primarily of small to
medium sized schools with enrollments that range from
1,500-15,000 students. College institutions in this
classification can, if they choose to, offer athletic
scholarships for student athletes. The NCAA sets the number of
full athletic scholarships a school can fund. Presently the
limits for Division II swimming scholarships is as follows:
Women's Scholarships: 8.1
Men's Scholarships: 8.1
Number of Division II Swimming Programs: Women's Programs: 67;
Men's Programs: 50
Division III:
NCAA Division III institutions are comprised primarily of small
colleges and universities with enrollments that range from
600-5,000 students. Division III institutions cannot offer
athletic scholarships for student athletes. Financial Aid can be
offered on a need based assessment only and primarily is in the
form of academic scholarships, grants, and student loans.
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NAIA:
The National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics, NAIA, is comprised of over
300 member institutions ranging in size from around
400-2500 students. Roughly 90% of all NAIA schools offer
athletic scholarships.
Any financial aid
or assistance to prospective students, in money or in kind,
except from members of the student's immediate family or
from those upon whom the student is legally dependent, shall
be administered by the institution under the policies and
procedures established by the institution through the
regularly constituted committee on student loans and
scholarships.
A member
institution of the NAIA shall award no more
institutionally-controlled financial aid to a
student-athlete than the actual cost of: 1) tuition; 2)
mandatory fees, books and supplies required for courses in
which the student-athlete is enrolled; 3) board and room for
the student-athlete only, based on the official board and
room allowance listed in the institution's catalog. Further
financial assistance to a student-athlete, other than listed
above, by a member institution shall be prohibited.
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NJCAA:
The National
Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) is the
governing body of intercollegiate athletics for two-year
colleges. As such, its programs are designed to meet the
unique needs of a diverse group of student-athletes who
come from both traditional and non-traditional
backgrounds and whose purpose in selecting a junior
college may be as varied as their experiences before
attending college. NJCAA may offer athletic
scholarships for student athletes but are not required
to do so.
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Scholarships:
There is often a
misconception in the college search process that if you
are not recruited or have not been offered a scholarship
you must not be very good. That view is completely
false. The fact is that most colleges just do not have
the finances available to offer every good swimmer a
scholarship. Another fact is that most colleges do not
find out a student-athlete is interested in their
program until that student has made "First Contact".
Many families assume that colleges are going to call
them first. The reality is that most collegiate
swimming programs do not have the manpower to search for
athletes. Most coaches rely on meet results from large
meets such as Sectionals or High School State,
prospective student questionnaires, and through
professional recruiters (not sports agents) whom a
student-athletes pay a fee to have them send information
to schools about them.
With the scholarship limits
that are imposed by the NCAA, most college coaches are
going to be looking at a students academic ability. The
vast majority of swimming student athletes receive
financial aid through academic related scholarships,
grants and student loans, not through athletic
scholarships.
An athletic
scholarship is a one-year contract between you
and a Division I or Division II institution. A
school can reduce or cancel a scholarship of you become
ineligible for competition, fraudulently misrepresent
yourself, quit the team or engage in serious misconduct.
During the contract year, a coach cannot reduce or
cancel your scholarship on the basis of your athletic
ability, performance, or injury. An institution
may choose to not renew a scholarship at the end of the
academic term provided they notify you in writing and
provide you an opportunity for a hearing.
Remember a coach cannot
offer you a "four year full-ride scholarship". They do
not exist! Each student athlete award is reviewed
annually. It is important to ask current collegiate
swimmers if they are still on scholarship. Parents, it
is not uncommon for a college program to offer and renew
an athletic scholarship for the first 2-3 years of
college and then ask the student to pay full tuition for
the remainder of their college career.
The National Letter
of Intent (NLI) is administered by the
Collegiate Commissioners Association (not the NCAA).
When you sign the National Letter of Intent you agree to
attend the institution with which you signed for one
academic year in exchange for the institution awarding
financial aid, including athletics aid, for one academic
year.
Finding a College:
There is a
college swimming opportunity available for every swimmer
who wishes to compete in college regardless of ability.
A swimmer does not need to be the fastest recruit on the
team or have national cuts in order to swim in college.
One of the most important things a
student athlete should consider when looking at a college is
not how good the swim team is, however, does the collegiate
institution provide the student with the best education to
meet the career interests of the student as well as provide
an environment that will foster a students academic,
emotional, athletic, and spiritual growth. When a student
athlete graduates from a collegiate institution will they
have the skills necessary for success in our society today?
Top 10 things that parents and student-athletes should
consider when conducting a college search:
1. The institution academic rating. The US News and World
Report publishes annual rankings of the best colleges across
the United States based upon institution size, class sizes,
degree programs offered, graduation rates, professors with
Ph.D.'s, alumni support, rate of acceptance into post
graduate schools, percentage of incoming freshman that
graduate, percentage of students receiving financial
assistance, and average SAT and ACT test scores of accepted
students. Parents are highly encouraged to review the
ranking of any institution their student athlete attends.
2. Student Academics: Does the student-athlete have the
grades, course work, test scores, and skills necessary to be
accepted into the institution as a non-student athlete? This
is important to understand: if you are offered a college
athletic scholarship, will the student-athlete be able to
handle the college course work of your major and still be
able to participate as a collegiate swimmer? A very large
number of student-athletes have to drop out of college or
lose their athletic scholarships because they failed to
satisfactorily complete their required course-work.
3. Size of the institution. For many student athletes to
find success in college they must consider the size of the
school. " Size Does Matter." Are students going to be in
large classes of 100 or more students where the professor
will never know their name or will the feel more comfortable
in school where the class sizes are at a very low ratio?
4. Location: Where is the institution located? Is the
college in a small town, large city, suburb, close to an
airport, close to home. How is the climate during the school
year? Is the student athlete from San Antonio going to be
able to adjust to life living in Fairbanks, Alaska?
5. Degree programs: Does the college provide a degree and
major in a field of study that meets the students' interest.
Does the college offer many majors? The vast majority of
students' change their major at least once while in college.
6. Social Life: What kind of social life is available for
students. Every college has some form of residential life
office that offers students a wide variety of social and
entertainment opportunities.
7. Values: Does the institution create an environment that
meets your values? Does the institution meet your worship
needs such as churches, synagogues, mosques etc? How well is
the student-athlete prepared to handle people from different
cultures, values, races, and sexual orientation?
8. Does the College Swimming Program meet the needs as a
student athlete? Are you going to be the best on the team?
If so how do feel about that kind of pressure? Will you just
be average swimmer member on team and if so what is the
coaches relationship with the average swimmer in the
program? At what level does the program compete and will the
athlete have an opportunity to be successful at that level.
9. What is the past history of the program? Is the team
rebuilding or solid? How long have the coaches been at the
school? How stable is the coaching staff in term of change?
At what level does the program aspire to be? How many
incoming first year students swim all four years of college
and how many actually graduate?
10. What has been the relationship between the swimming
program and college? Is it possible the program may be cut
in the near future? Have members of the program had trouble
with police or the college administration for failing to
follow school policy? How is the teams overall G.P.A.?
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Recruiting:
Some student athletes will be actively recruited be collegiate institutions. However, the vast majority of student athletes need to be prepared to sell themselves as a potentially valuable member of swimming team and student body of a collegiate institution. Don't worry if you are not actively recruited to swim. There are plenty of opportunities to compete and get a great education at the same time.
Here are some
important things to do:
1. In order for an
NCAA Division I or II program to actively recruit an
athlete the athlete must have been cleared by the NCAA
Eligibility Clearinghouse. The NCAA requires that all
prospective student athletes meet a base line
educational requirement to be recruited. In a nutshell,
your grades in your core classes and performance on
national standardized tests do matter. The NCAA has
developed a guide to help parents, student athletes and
school administrators with the collegiate recruiting
process including information on how to apply to the
clearinghouse.
2.
Beginning the fall of 2006 the NCAA will require all
prospective student athletes to also to have been
cleared by the
NCAA Amateurism Certification
Clearinghouse. "Beginning fall 2006,
the NCAA Amateurism Certification Clearinghouse will be
the processing center for determining the amateurism
eligibility of domestic and international freshman and
transfer prospective student-athletes for initial
athletics participation at NCAA Divisions I and II
member institutions. [Note: In NCAA Division III,
certification of an individual's amateurism status is
completed by each institution, not the amateurism
certification clearinghouse.]"
3. Create a resume which includes
your swimming best times, swimming accomplishments and
academic awards, community service projects, clubs,
hobbies. You should also include a bio of your
competitive history in terms of your swimming
background. How long have you been swimming? Are you a
year round swimmer? Best events?
4. During the spring of your Junior
year of high school you should meet with your HS
Guidance Counselor to make sure you have completed the
appropriate coursework to graduate on time and have
taken the correct number of classes to be cleared
through the
NCAA Clearinghouse.
5. A swimmer should begin making a
list of a schools that best fit the swimmers needs.
Often this list can include dozens of schools. the hard
part is narrowing your choice to between 5-10 schools to
visit and apply to.
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Making
Contact:
Once a student athlete has
narrowed down the number of schools they are interested in
they may decide to contact a swimming coach. One of the best
ways to express your interest in a college program is to
complete an athletic questionnaire. Most colleges have
either downloadable or online request for information forms
on their athletic websites. Most athletes begin completing
athletic questionnaires during their Sophomore and Junior
years in high school. Please be aware that college coaches
have limitations as to how they may contact you.
Mail -
With the exception of
an athletic questionnaire and camp brochure, Division I and
II schools cannot provide recruiting materials to you until
September 1st at the start of your junior year. After that
date, schools can send you general correspondence,
attachments printed on white paper with black ink, business
cards, wallet-size schedule card, and one media guide or
recruiting brochure. Division I and II schools cannot send
you recruiting or highlight videos, or CD-ROM's, though they
may show them to you on campus. Division II has no such
restrictions.
Phone Calls -
Division I and
II colleges and universities are prohibited from calling you
prior to July 1st following the completion of a prospect's
junior year. If you received a call prior to July 1st, that
school broke the law. After that coaches may call you once
per week. Exceptions to this limit are made a) during the
five days prior to your official visit; b) the day of an
in-person, off-campus contact; and c) subsequent to your
national letter of intent signing. Calls may be made by most
athletic staff, but not student-athletes. Division III has
no such limits.
Electronic Contacts -
E-mail
and faxes are considered mail, so they are permissible to
juniors. AOL's Instant Messenger and similar services are
considered telephone calls and limited to seniors.
Contacts and Evaluations -
Any
face-to-face meeting between a college coach and you or your
parents, during which any of you say more than "hello" is a
contact. If no contact is made between a coach and you or
your parents, this is considered an evaluation. For all
divisions, a college coach cannot contact you off-campus and
in person until July 1 prior to your senior year. During the
academic year Division I and II institutions are limited to
seven permissible recruiting opportunities (contacts and
evaluations) with you, not more than three of them may be
in-person, off-campus contacts with you.
Contacts at a Meet -
A coach
may not speak with you at a meet until the conclusion of
your final event and clearance from your high school or club
coach. If the meet takes place over a number of days,
college coaches will have to wait until the final day to
speak with you.
Please note that many coaches do not have year-round
contracts and they may not immediately respond to e-mail
especially during the summer months. If you do not hear a
response from a coach don't assume they are not interested.
Feel free to send a second follow-up email.
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One of the most important things a student should do is
visit a college before deciding to attend. Their are two
general ways most students visit a college campus: Official
Visits and Unofficial Visits.
Official Visits - You are limited to five
official visits. On an official visit a school CAN
pay for your transportation, lodging, and meals. The
school can also pay for your parent's meals, and
lodging. The school may also pay for their
transportation provided you traveled by automobile.
Institutions may also provide a student host with
$30 for entertainment ($20 in Division III) within a
30 mile radius of campus and may also provide you
with and your parents with complimentary admissions
to a campus athletics event. Additional tickets may
be reserved and purchased at face value by other
family members accompanying you on a visit. They
cannot provide you with gifts of any kind including
photos, t-shirts, etc.
Unofficial Visits -
A
school may provide you with three complimentary
admissions to a campus athletics event on an
unofficial visit. A school cannot pay for your
meals, lodging, or entertainment on an unofficial
visit, although you are permitted to stay in student
housing with a student-athlete by paying the regular
institutional rate (which is frequently nothing for
short-term guests).
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Preparing for
College Timetable:
JUNIOR YEAR
1. September: Register for the PSAT/NMSQT
About PSAT/NMSQT:
The
Preliminary SAT®/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test is a
co-sponsored program by the College Board and
National Merit Scholarship Corporation (NMSC).
PSAT/NMSQT stands for Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship
Qualifying Test. It's a standardized test that provides
firsthand practice for the SAT Reasoning Test™. It also gives
you a chance to enter National Merit Scholarship Corporation
(NMSC) scholarship programs.
The PSAT/NMSQT measures:
* critical reading skills
* math problem-solving skills
* writing skills
You have developed these skills over many
years, both in and out of school. This test doesn't require you
to recall specific facts from your classes.
The most common reasons for taking the
PSAT/NMSQT are:
-to receive feedback on your strengths
and weaknesses on skills necessary for college study. You
can then focus your preparation on those areas that could
most benefit from additional study or practice.
-to see how your performance on an
admissions test might compare with that of others applying
to college.
-to enter the competition for
scholarships from the National Merit Scholarship Corporation
(grade 11).
-to help prepare for the SAT. You can
become familiar with the kinds of questions and the exact
directions you will see on the SAT.
-to receive information from colleges
when you check "yes" to Student Search Service.
2. Sept-Oct Test date: Review
Official Student Guide to the PSAT/NMSQT
(Links go directly to college board PSAT Practice Exam)
If you plan to
take the PSAT/NMSQT in the fall, pick up the
Official Student Guide to the PSAT/NMSQT
from your guidance office in September.
The Student Guide has three main
sections:
1. Test taking help
2. Information about National Merit
Scholarship Corporation scholarship competitions
3. A full-length practice test
Use the Student Guide to Do Your Best
* Review the section about scholarships
with your parents.
* Practice now with sample critical
reading, math, and writing skills questions.
* Get familiar with the instructions for
each type of test question.
* Take the practice test like it's the
real thing!
PSAT Prep: Spending your school years
taking challenging academic courses and reading widely is the
best way to get ready for the PSAT/NMSQT.
The PSAT/NMSQT
includes the same types of critical reading, math, and writing
skills multiple choice questions as the
SAT® Reasoning Test.
Ready to give the questions a test run?
Pick a section below, and you'll find tips and practice
questions with answers and explanations for each type of
question.
Critical Reading:
Sentence Completion
questions measure your knowledge of the meanings of words and
ability to understand how the different parts of a sentence
logically fit together. Practice now.
Passage-Based Reading questions measure
your ability to read and think carefully about a single reading
passage or a pair of related passages. Practice now.
Mathematics:
The math section of the PSAT/NMSQT requires a basic knowledge of
number and operation; algebra and functions (though not content
covered in third-year math classes--content that will appear on
the new SAT); geometry and measurement; and data analysis,
statistics, and probability. You can use a calculator to answer
math questions, but no question on the test requires a
calculator.
Multiple Choice questions ask you to
decide which is the best of the five choices given. Practice
now.
Grid-ins, or student-produced response
questions, require you to solve a problem and enter your answer.
Practice now.
Writing:
T he multiple-choice questions on writing
skills measure your ability to express ideas effectively in
standard-written English, to recognize faults in usage and
structure, and to use language with sensitivity to meaning.
Identifying Sentence Errors questions
test your knowledge of grammar, usage, word choice, and idiom.
You are required to find errors in sentences or indicate that
there is no error. Practice now.
Improving Sentences questions ask you to
choose the best, most effective form of an underlined portion of
a given sentence. Practice now.
Improving Paragraphs questions require
you to make choices about improving the logic, coherence, or
organization in a flawed passage. Practice now.
Additional
Information concerning the PSAT Exam can be found at
www.collegeboard.com.
3. October- Take the PSAT and attend
College Fair.
During the last two weeks of October most
of the area school districts sponsor a college fair where
admission office representatives from various colleges will be
able to answer general questions about their school as well
provide you with literature about what the college has to offer.
Gather as much information as you can while attending this
event. Get on as many he college mailing lists as you can.
4. November-December: Review your PSAT
Scores
Once you receive your scores review them
and identify areas of weakness that you need to
address/concentrate on in preparing for taking the SAT in May.
Following the receipt of your scores sit with your guidance
counselor and get the necessary information for signing up for
the May SAT and sign up early so you can get your study guide
for that test ASAP!
5. January-May SAT: Prepare for the SAT
and plan to college visits.
Visit
www.collegeboard.com
for study guides and practice tests.
A. Make time to prepare for the exam. In
January and February find 1-2 hours each week to focus on
Increasing Vocabulary; Make 3 x 5 flash cards; buy a pocket
dictionary; Increase reading of news articles and editorials.
For example, spend time reading Time Magazine cover to cover and
the Express-News Editorial Page, this will help improve
vocabulary and aid in skill development for writing.
B. March-April, 8-10 weeks prior to test:
Increase time review time to 2-4 hrs each week. Focus on writing
skills. Know how to form paragraphs, proper structure of
sentences, use of correct grammar and punctuation. Take an SAT
Prep Course if possible. Utilize SAT study guides.
C. March: Spring Break-Plan a family trip
to visit a few colleges you have an interest in. A great time
for parents and students to get a feeling of a college campus.
The vast majority of colleges offer tours year-round. Contact
the school in advance about getting a tour of the school.
D. January-May: Research potential
colleges. Start completing prospective student athlete forms
online or mail them to the school as soon as possible.
6. May:
A. Study for Semester / Final Exams
B. Take the SAT and report your scores to
colleges of interest.
C. Enroll in NCAA Clearinghouses
Enroll in the
NCAA Initial Eligibility Clearinghouse
and the
NCAA Amateurism Certification
Clearinghouse (required for
fall 2006). Your school will be required to submit official
transcripts to the Initial Eligibility Clearinghouse. Please
follow-up with your counselors immediately following the last
day of school to make sure transcripts are sent.
7. June - August
A. Find a summer job or
internship/volunteer in a potential major field. Log as many
community service hours as you can during the summer. This will
become more important when applying to colleges and for
scholarships.
B. Summer Training: Most Division I
colleges will be looking to make decisions on whether to recruit
you off the results of your Long Course season after your Junior
year. If you are considered one of their top prospects the
college coaches goal will be to sign you in November.
C. Narrowing the field and visiting
schools: From October-June you should start receiving mail from
the various colleges. When mail arrives begin sorting the
information into: Colleges of High Interest, Colleges of
Moderate Interest, Colleges of Little Interest. Summer is great
time to make visiting colleges a family vacation. However, try
not to plan long trips away from training since most colleges
coaches are looking at your Long Course performance as an
indicator for recruiting. Try to narrow your schools of interest
down to 10-12 schools and if possible try to visit about half of
them during the summer.
SENIOR YEAR
1. August-September
A. Plan on retaking the SAT exam in
October/November and adding the ACT exam in either November or February.
B. Review your previous test scores and
work on areas that needed improvement.
2. September-October: College Matching
A. Compare your test scores, GPA, and
class rank with the colleges of high interest acceptance rates.
B. Second look at your athletic
performance/best times and do they mesh with needs of a college
program.
C. Review for the SAT and ACT exams.
D. Conduct scholarship and financial aid
searches.
E. Take Recruiting Trips
F. Complete early decision application:
Some colleges programs will ask you to apply early decision
meaning if you apply early decision and are accepted you are
committing yourself to attending that school the following year.
3. October-December:
A. Complete college applications.
B. Recruiting trips.
C. November: Early signing period NCAA
Div I athletic programs.
C. Begin applying for scholarships and
grants
D. Parents
start getting data for Federal Tax Return ready in order to
apply for FAFSA program. FAFSA- Free Application for
Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
You must
fill out the
FAFSA form
in order to apply for federal and state
student assistance. Many colleges and universities, especially
public institutions, also require the FAFSA. The www.finaid.org
website section on the FAFSA contains a database of the Title IV
School Codes needed to complete the form as well as instructions
and tips for filling it out. The section also links to a variety
of government sites related to the FAFSA, such as FAFSA Express
(a PC version of the form) and FAFSA on the Web (an interactive
online version of the form).
4. January-February:
A. Complete and apply for scholarships
B. Parents submit and apply for
FAFSA
program.
C. Last of Recruiting Trips.
D. Take ACT exam if not taken in
November.
5. Late February-Early April:
A. Receive acceptance, rejection, and
waiting list letters from colleges.
B. Receive Financial Aid information from
FAFSA and package offers from colleges.
C. Make a decision on which college to
attend.D. Apply for campus related scholarships and student
loans if necessary.
6. May-June: High School Graduation -
Congratulations!
USEFUL LINKS
COLLEGE RECRUITING: THE FIVE MOST
IMPORTANT AREAS OF CONSIDERATIONS
(PDF)
by Gary Kinkead, Head Coach University of
Indiana
ACT, SAT, PSAT National Merit Scholar
Testing
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