Palmer Trinity School

PTS452_College-Handbook-2023-24_R2 REVISED-05302024.0417pm COLLEGE ADVISING 2024

An independent, college preparatory, co-ed, Episcopal Day School serves a community of students in grades 6-12.

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palmertrinity.org 7 Adolescents feel a tremendous amount of pressure associated with the college search. You, as parents, play an important role in making this experience more comfortable and productive for your children. You can offer your children support as they go through this time of exploration. If they aren't accepted at a particular school, you can help them deal with the disappointment and move on. Parents feel a great deal of pressure as well. Some of you may look upon college choice as the "final exam" of parenting and judge whether you have passed or failed by your perception of the "value" of your child's college admission. Try to maintain perspective! Resist the urge to think of the college selection process as merely a "numbers game." Your child is not a 32 ACT, a 1030 SAT, or a 3.15 GPA. Similarly, a college's quality cannot be summarized by a mathematical formula or a national magazine's rankings. Admission decisions, while they all use numbers as a starting point, are not always rational or obvious, as admission people will sometimes admit after the fact. Making these decisions is, in truth, more of an art than a science. As parents, you should acknowledge and share your aspirations, but keep them in the context of all the other factors that are part of your student's college search. You need to lend your support and guidance, but he or she should be the one to take the lead. Be there for your student, but allow them to be the one who asks the questions. You might be asking yourselves how to determine what makes a "good" college. Is it the percentage of applicants the institution accepts each year? Is it the school's average SAT scores? Is it the rating a college receives in a national magazine's report? ese numbers, in our opinion, are a poor starting point at best, often leading families away from the hard work of finding a truly relevant definition of a "good" institution or a "good fit" for their child. SECTION 2 JUST FOR PARENTS

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