52 Weeks to College: Week 13

April To-Do List for Juniors

April? Already? Time flies! Here’s a preview of what you’ll be focusing on in April.

WEEK 13 TIPS & TRICKS

  • Do your schoolwork, so you finish the year strong. Of course it is challenging to do your schoolwork remotely. But you can finish strong. First, make a schedule and stick to it. That’s what you have to do in college, too, when you will be in charge of the vast majority of your time. Second, beef up your skills at being an autodidact. What? An autodidact is a self-taught person. We’ll have a blog post soon about some tips for teaching yourself. In the meantime, get your schedule up and running and do whatever assignments your teachers give you. Your final grades will matter, so put yourself on track for the year-end grades you want.

  • Dial back, but don’t give up, practicing for standardized tests. You may not be making a final decision on whether and which tests you will be taking until this summer, but in the meantime you want to keep up your skills. So slot in 15-20 minutes of practice for standardized tests on every school day. If you know that you really need work on a particular type of question or section of the test, then start devoting more time to that now.

  • Be creative about activities. Group-based, in-person activities are not the only kinds of activities that count as “activities.” You can devote time to a solo hobby, help your parents manage the household (maybe you could cook meals, clean, or occupy a younger sibling), or find a way to volunteer. Admissions officers will look favorably on those who were productive despite whatever constraints they faced. Plus, you will get bored and depressed if you do nothing but stare at a screen!

  • Get a jumpstart on college applications. Here’s a short list of do’s and don’ts:

    • Do create accounts on both the Common App (and/or the Coalition App — check which your school-based counselor if your school has a particluar preference between the two) and fill in the basics about yourself, because that information will rollover into your account for next year. You don’t need to start on essays yet. (And definitely don’t start working on college-specific essays yet, because the 2023-24 essays won’t be loaded into the application platforms until August.)

    • Do start researching different colleges and what attracts you about them. That will be important prep work for your applications down the road. Even if the colleges on your list won’t have a “Why College X” essay in their application, doing that research now will help you clarify your thinking about your college list and your possible major. Also, it will give you a potential supplemental essay to submit and help prep you for interviews. Plus – biggest bonus of all — you’ll get a head start on how to answer those questions, which all the adults in your life will invariably ask you! We’ll have specific tips for those essays later in the year, but you can start getting the lay of the land. Remember that you’re still in exploring mode right now; you’re not finalizing any lists yet.

    • Do start investigating any portfolios or other artistic supplements if you think you might be submitting them. We’ll have more advice around these later in the year as well.