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College Planning Checklists
Even freshman can benefit from pre-college planning. Use these
checklists from
ACT.org to help stay on track. Sallie
Mae and CollegeAnswer.com also offer a checklist at this
link.
Freshman
Sophomores
Juniors
Seniors
August
-
Sign up for the ACT
(if you didn't take it as a junior, or if you aren't
satisfied with your score, or if you've learned a lot since you
first took it.)
- Review ACT test results and
retest if necessary
August – December
- Visit with your school counselor to make sure you are on
track to graduate and fulfill college admission requirements
- Consider taking courses at a local university or community
college
- Keep
working hard all year; second
semester grades can affect scholarship eligibility
- Ask for personal references from teachers, school
counselors, or employers early in the year or
at least two weeks before application deadlines. Follow
your school's procedure for requesting recommendations.
- Visit with admissions counselors who come to your high
school
- Attend a college fair
- Begin your college essay(s)
-
Apply for admission at the colleges you've
chosen
- Avoid common
college application mistakes
- Find out if you qualify for scholarships at each college you
have applied to
- Start the
financial aid application process
- See your school counselor for help finding financial aid and
scholarships
January – May
- If you need it, get
help completing the FAFSA
- Ask your guidance office in January to send first semester
transcripts to schools where you applied. In May, they will need
to send final transcripts to the college you will attend.
- Visit colleges that have invited you to enroll
- Decide which college to attend, and notify the school of
your decision
- Keep track of and observe deadlines for sending in all
required fees and paperwork
- Notify schools you will not attend of your decision
- Continue to look for scholarship opportunities
- Keep track of important financial aid and scholarship
deadlines
- Watch the mail for your
Student Aid Report (SAR)—it
should arrive four weeks after the FAFSA is filed
- Compare financial aid packages from different schools
- Sign and send in a promissory note if you are borrowing
money
- Notify your college about any outside scholarships you
received
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