Thursday, December 17, 2009

PSAT Results & More!

PSAT results are in! Attached is the powerpoint presentation that our students were presented this week by the counselors. Students were also given their practice test and scores so you can understand the results of the test. Alicia Williams, NHS Counselor has provided a couple of articles below that you will find interesting as well as the attached College Board Student Handout.

This is great information for you to read about dispelling college admission myths. So much of our student's time is spent worrying about getting IN to a college rather than focusing on WHERE they are going and looking for the best fit. Now is the time to be visiting and researching colleges.

Another great resource at Newport is the Career Center. Barb Mercier, Career Specialist, can help your student with career exploration workshops, job hunting, programs, camps & internships. This is another great way to start your student's college search. The Career Center is located near the ASB and accounting office. Students can drop in anytime.

Wishing everyone a relaxed winter break. Enjoy your time with family and friends!
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Julie Rooney
PTSA Class of 2011 Liaison
http://newport-ptsa-2011.blogspot.com/

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Top Myths About College Admissions

Tuesday, Apr. 22nd 2008 6:29

A lot of students believe that there’s a holy grail of rules that you need to follow to get into your desired school. Surprisingly (for some), that’s not the case. Here are some myths about college acceptance that need to be dispelled.
  1. You need a perfect SAT score to get into an Ivy League school.
  2. You need a perfect GPA to get into an Ivy League school.
  3. Your perfect SAT score will get into an Ivy League school.
  4. Your perfect GPA will get you into an Ivy.
  5. Your perfect GPA and SAT score will get you into an Ivy League school.
  6. If you have what it takes (in 1-5), “second tier” schools will offer you scholarships to join their programs.
  7. Public colleges are cheaper than private colleges.
  8. Obsessing over grades in high school is worth the hassle because you’re guaranteed admission to your favorite school.
  9. Ivy League universities provide education unsurpassed by local, public, or smaller schools.
  10. Rankings mean everything to a school and should be considered in your college decision-making.
  11. It’s best to attend the most prestigious university you’re accepted to.
  12. You should join 30 clubs for quantity instead of focusing on building up a credible reputation in one or two solid extracurricular activities.
  13. Students coming from unfortunate financial situations are lucky because they’ll be offered a full ride to the colleges of their choice.
  14. Applying to schools without financial need increases your chances of acceptance.
  15. All in-state colleges are safety schools.
  16. Valedictorians and salutatorians will get into any schools they apply to.
  17. Colleges look down on students who take the ACT in comparison to the SAT.
  18. You must have accumulated community service hours to be considered for college admissions.
  19. Ivy League schools are full of people who are rich.
  20. If you’re deferred, that means you’ll have no chance of getting into the school.
  21. There is one school out there that fits you perfectly.
  22. Having family who are alumni will guarantee your admissions into schools more so than having good scores.
  23. If you don’t get into the school of your choosing, your life is over.
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College Admissions Myths - Forbes.com

Sep 13, 2006 ... Nine things you thought would get you into college--but won't.
www.forbes.comLeadershipCareers - Cached - Similar – this is a great story on the forbes website.

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In or Out: Inside College Admissions- this is one of my favorite articles!

By JODIE MORSE Sunday, Oct. 15, 2000


Eagle-eyed: Cornell officers read between the lines

BEN STECHSCHULTE FOR TIME

What to do about Theater Boy? That was the question vexing Peggy Walbridge and David Field as the two admissions readers paged through his application to Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. With a 1,420 SAT score, solid grades and top scores on two Advanced Placement exams, the applicant — we're calling him Theater Boy to protect his identity — certainly looked like Cornell material. He had appeared in professional music productions and helped raise over $50,000 to stage plays at his school. "That's pretty amazing," Walbridge muttered. Field chuckled as he read through the applicant's essay about his voice changing from a once beautiful boyhood soprano. Said Field: "There's a nice sense of humor in this writing."

Still, something gave the readers pause. There was nothing outstanding in the applicant's two teacher recommendations. A more gushing letter came from his boss at the pizza place where he worked after school, detailing Theater Boy's rapport with the restaurant's immigrant cooks. "He sure sounds like a wonderful employee," said Walbridge. Field interjected, "But is he a real scholar?" Theater Boy wrote that he wants to study politics and history. But the two readers wondered why he hadn't studied more of them already. Theater Boy's moment was fading as quickly as it came. "The more I think about it, I don't see enough real scholarship here," sighed Field. "I just have a feeling we can do better."

They can, because Cornell, like other elite colleges, has seven applicants for every spot in its freshman class. As 1.2 million high school seniors begin the college-application process in earnest this month, competition has never been fiercer. Nor have students been better prepared. These days, kids in junior high take high school academic classes to make room for more demanding courses in the later grades. And in just the past decade, there's been an 83% increase in the number of ninth-graders who take the sat — just for practice.

But even if you didn't take calculus in the ninth grade, there are steps you can take at application time to better your odds. Last spring three of the country's most selective schools — Rice University, Bowdoin College and Cornell University — allowed TIME behind the closed doors of their admissions deliberations. The one stipulation: that TIME not use the names or certain identifying characteristics of kids like Theater Boy. The insights we gleaned won't substitute for top scores and grades. But they did puncture some of the myths that often prevent an applicant from winning admission to his or her favorite college.

Myth 1 - Make yourself look as well rounded as possible
You would think that a flutist-cum-poet with a 1,520 sat, an unblemished transcript and a passion for philosophy would find a warm welcome at Houston's Rice University. Renaissance Girl was involved in so many extracurricular activities — band, the literary magazine, the astronomy, philosophy and poetry clubs — that it took minute handwriting to squeeze them onto the application. Yet she never made it off the waiting list.

In the parlance of Rice's admissions committee, Renaissance Girl was a "clubber," a serial joiner of school organizations who never rises to a leadership position. One Cornell applicant submitted a one-page, single-spaced addendum to his application that cataloged, as one admissions officer exasperatedly termed it, "every activity he's ever participated in." With the "spread too thin" designation on his voting sheet, even his perfect 800 score on the verbal half of the SAT wasn't enough to stave off rejection.

Says Don Saleh, Cornell's dean of admissions and fInancial aid: "Students should occupy leadership roles and show years of commitment. That's one way we know kids aren't doing activities just to put them on their applications." Another is to ask how many hours students spend on each activity. And in an instance where the numbers seemed high? A gimlet-eyed Cornell officer whipped out a calculator to reveal that the (unsuccessful) applicant claimed to spend 50 hours a week on after-school pursuits.

Myth 2 - The essay counts only in close calls
Before even glancing at grades or test scores, admissions officers at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, rate a student's personal statement. That first impression can color the whole discussion. The committee, for example, issued a swift rejection to a student whose essay was riddled with typos. After reading a moving tale of how one student bonded with a Chilean immigrant struggling to educate his children, assistant dean Debbie DeVeaux went to bat for the applicant: "I love this guy. I hope you love him as much as I do."

A little warmth and humor never hurts either. Bowdoin requires a second, shorter essay on an influential teacher. Most students opt for a boiler-plate hymn to the hardest teacher in school. But a rare description of a teacher who "was big, but not overweight ... like you could trust her to provide you with bread and beef through the winter" got the committee laughing. And the essay's touching conclusion — "she taught me how to improve from a mistake and still like myself" — sent them straight for the admit stamp. Otherwise, the student's B record would not have got him in.

Admissions officers say the most successful essays show curiosity and self-awareness. Says Cornell's Saleh: "It's the only thing that really lets us see inside your soul." While there's no one right formula for soul baring, there are many wrong ones. It's disastrous to write, as one Rice applicant did, of what he could "bring to the University of California." A self-absorbed or arrogant tone is also a guaranteed turnoff. Exhibit A: a Rice essay beginning, "I have accumulated a fair amount of wisdom in a relatively limited time of life." Exhibit B: A Cornell applicant who set out to "describe the indescribable essence of myself."
The officers accept that student essays are often heavily edited and adapted for multiple applications. But if an essay seems too polished, they'll often compare the writing with that in other parts of the application, and even to a student's verbal SAT score.

Myth 3 - Send your "award-winning" art portfolio
Each spring admissions officers amass boxes full of discarded watercolors and videotaped productions of the Music Man — and the occasional batch of brownies — all sent by students hoping such extras will increase their prospects. More often they distract readers from the real meat of the application. One Cornell applicant, Budding Author, directed readers to her "countless short stories and novellas." Though the admissions officers were impressed with the other parts of Budding Author's application, they didn't quite know what to make of her creative writing. "Well it's not quite soft porn," said a confused Walbridge. Instead of receiving a fat acceptance packet, Budding Author was wait-listed.

At Cornell and Bowdoin, admissions readers typically send art slides and music tapes out to department heads to get an expert appraisal. Those rare applicants who get a ringing endorsement are usually instant hits back in the committee room. That was the case for one student's trumpet performance, which received the top rating from Cornell's music department. But, noted reader Ken Gabard, "it's only 1 in 100 who gets this kind of reception."

Myth 4 - Don't spill your guts
Admissions officers love a good against-all-odds story line. "We like to see that kids have overcome adversity," says Cornell's Gabard. "Goodness knows, they'll face adversity in college." Provided the adversity is authentic — like a death in the family — it can make a much more gripping essay topic than a summer jaunt through Europe. And if applicants have suffered any dip in academic performance, they need to account for it, either in an essay or a counselor's letter.

With scattered Cs in the ninth and 10th grades and football and guitar as his only extracurriculars, Comeback Kid would normally have missed Bowdoin's first cut of applications. But in his essay he wrote of how he'd spent those first two years of high school: "slowly poisoning myself in a pool of malted hops." Then a close relative who was an alcoholic died of a stroke. After that, he cut out the beer, got A-pluses in his senior year and won a national writing award. He also won a unanimous thumbs-up for admission.

Schools are also taken with good students from families with little education or money. At Bowdoin, this is known as an "NC/BC" case, for no college/blue collar; at Rice, it's an application with "overcome" factors. At Cornell, admissions readers were initially not too impressed by a student with good test scores but whose grades were all over the map. Then one reader noticed that she came from a family with no higher education and worked up to 40 hours a week as a cashier. But it was her essay that really swayed the committee, as she described being derisively called "white girl" by some other blacks and related how one classmate told her that he "looked forward to seeing me flipping burgers' after graduation."

Before you go crafting your sob story, it bears noting that college admissions officers are among the world's finest b.s. detectors. A case in point: one student's Cornell essay about a relative's homosexuality struck an admissions reader as gratuitous: "This has got shock value written all over it."

Myth 5 - If a teacher says he'll write a rec, it will be a good one
For admissions officers, there's a distinct hierarchy to recommendation letters. "Brilliant means more than bright," says Bowdoin's senior associate dean of admissions Linda Kreamer. "Hardworking and motivated' probably means the student isn't too smart." Cornell readers bristled at a recommendation hailing a student who "cares more about what he learns than what grades he gets." Translation: If admitted, he'd wind up on academic probation.

The best recommendations describe a student's accomplishments with specific and knowing details. Bowdoin's admissions committee was on the fence about one applicant who had good grades but below-average test scores. Then it scanned his two recommendations. "A rare gem," said one letter; the other called him a "mature humanitarian." Most compelling, though, was a tidbit missing from the rest of the application. The student had come up with a unique scheme for supporting world famine relief: he pledged his weekly allowance and persuaded his parents to give matching grants. Cornell readers were similarly impressed with a letter that touted an applicant's papers on Billie Holiday and Vietnam veterans.

To improve his accolades, a student shouldn't necessarily ask the best teacher in school, who's probably swamped with other requests, but should instead seek out someone who really knows him and his work. A student should also jog the memory of his recommender with a cheat sheet of his accomplishments — including a copy of a well-received term paper.

Myth 6 - Don't be too eager
Colleges want students who want them. That's one reason why kids who apply for early decision have a leg up. But for all applicants, it's unwise to skip a college's visit to your high school or, as one Rice applicant did, to ask an alumni interviewer if Rice was just a "second-tier" institution. As with most interactions a student has with a college, this one was duly noted. The interviewer wrote, "I don't think Rice should accept him."

There are also less obvious faux pas, like stating your intended major without checking that it's offered. Students are sometimes asked the number of schools to which they're applying, and some colleges take offense at being one of many under consideration. Rice was weighing one superbly qualified applicant when a reader mentioned that the school was just one of 15 on his list. The student wound up on the wait list.

But such close calls can just as easily swing the other way. Bowdoin's committee was ambivalent about one applicant until it read a last-minute addition to his file, a note saying, "Bowdoin College is at the top of my list." He was admitted.
— With reporting by Andrew Goldstein/Brunswick and Flora Tartakovsky/Houston

Sunday, December 6, 2009

December News!

Brrrr it is cold outside! And some very cold & icy mornings expected for next week. December is a busy month...

Sprit Week
Tolo
2011 Grad Knight Vino Event
AP Test Registration
PSAT Results
Yearbook Deadline
Student Store Cash Cards
Community Service - Levy calls
Support 2010 ESCRIP Fundraising
Bellevue District News

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Julie Rooney
PTSA Class of 2011 Liaison
http://newport-ptsa-2011.blogspot.com/


SPIRIT WEEK! Dec 7th to 11th
Monday – Sports Jersey Day
Tuesday – Snow Clothes Day
Wednesday – Neon Day
Thursday – Color Wars! Juniors – White
Friday – Red & Gold Day & assembly schedule
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Tolo
Tolo tickets will be on sale at both lunches next week, on Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday, as well as Wednesday after school. No tickets will be sold on Friday! Tickets will be $13 each. Be sure to get your guest passes if needed! Guest passes are available online and in the office and are due to the office by 3:15 on December 9th. No late passes will be accepted. Remember – your student will need an administrator from your guest’s school to sign it, so don’t wait until the last minute.
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2011 Grad Knight Fundraiser - Vino Event
RSVP's are coming in for our first 2011 Grad Knight Fundraiser! Sunday, December 13th 2:30-5:00 Vino @ The Landing. $25 per person or $40 per couple. RSVP to NHSClass2011@gmail.com or julierooney@msn.com
Bring your friends and try 4 different “Holiday Dinner Friendly” wines along with some light appetizers
Participate in wine tasting tips
Join in Holiday raffles - including Silpada earrings, gift card to Stan's BBQ in Issaquah, wine charms & chocolates!
Special discount for bottle purchases and gift bags for NHS Parents and Friends
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AP Test Registration
Online registration extended through Friday, Dec. 11th. The link is on the Newport website, at http://schools.bsd405.org/nhs/homepage/. Students use their password that gives them access to school computers, not the grade viewer password. Students register NOT parents! Still having problems? Send your student to the Main Office. If financial assistance is needed, send your student to the office to get the application. Return the forms to Ms. Suppes in the Main Office. If applying for financial assistance, do not make payment until your student has met with Ms. Suppes or Ms. Klug. Payments to the Accountant will be accepted starting December 7th
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Wondering about PSAT scores?
These will be received by the school this month. Hopefully before winter break, yet many times they are received during winter break. The counselors will meet with the students to explain how to read the test scores, sign up for SAT, etc.
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Buying a Yearbook?
The deadline to purchase a book is December 16!!! Books cost $55 and checks are made out to Newport High School. Any questions see Mrs. Pierson, the Accountant.

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Student Store Cash Cards
Send a check with your student and they can use a card like cash! No more worries about forgetting money!

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Community Service – Phone callers needed
PTA is looking for students to phone local residents and encourage them to vote in the February Levy election. Calling will be done at the Puget Sound Energy building in Bellevue, from 5 pm to 8 pm, and you can sign up for any of the following dates: January 25, 26, 27, 28, February 1, 2. Food will be served! Signup sheets are in the Main Office.
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2010 Grad Knight Fundraising
Let's support the Grad Knight efforts of the class of 2010. We'll be asking the other classes to support our efforts next year!
For those that like to skip the madness of holiday shopping and do it online please read the information posted below on how you can sign up to have your online shopping support GradKnight 2010! It takes thousands of dollars to put on this safe and fun event so here is an opportunity to help just by doing your normal online shopping. eScrip Online Mall has over 1,000 stores that contribute to our GradKnight account for items purchased from their website through eScrip. The contribution ranges from as low as 1.00% to as high as 16%. By using the directory as you enter the eScrip site you can see the list of stores and the percentage. Examples are: Old Navy - 3%, Amazon - 2.4%, Home Depot - 3% and Nordstrom contributes 6%. There are coupons and offers of free shipping as well and the site is E A S Y ! These are websites where you shop all the time. Go to this website to get started: https://secure.escrip.com/jsp/group/onlinemall/groupmallredir.jsp?gid=8565142, Existing eScrip members can log on by going to www.escrip.com and log on to their account and shop away. All purchases remain anonymous but the contribution goes directly to our eScrip account.
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District News

School Closure Information As temperatures drop and rumors of snow are beginning to surface, a new Emergency School Closure Information image link has also been placed on the home page (www.bsd405.org).

4th Annual Education Roadshow - Save the date! Wednesday, January 20, 2010 from 6:00 to 8:45 pm at Sammamish High School. The title is The Road Ahead: Understanding 21st Century Schools. You can learn more about education goals and innovations in Bellevue’s classrooms, as well as those emerging around the country. Guest speakers include Dr. John Deasy of the Gates Foundation, and Dr. Amalia Cudeiro, Bellevue Schools Superintendent.

District Budget Issues are serious. We don't want you to be surprised when they start talking larger class size, staff reduction or losing the 7 period day. There should be some info coming out from the legislative chairs soon about what kind of action can be taken that would be productive for us as parents. PTSA Focus Day is coming January 18, 2010 and the February Levy election - so stay tuned!
BSDreSource Blog - check out this blog from a high school student's perspective regarding budget cuts http://bsdresource.wordpress.com/
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