Design College Readiness Plan
Design a 4-year high school college readiness plan — covering academic track selection, testing strategy, extracurricular development, financial planning, and application timelines — to maximize college options while supporting the student's authentic development rather than resume optimization.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: The National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) publishes "State of College Admission" annually — the authoritative data source on admission trends. College Board and ACT provide official test preparation frameworks. Julie Lythcott-Haims' "How to Raise an Adult" is the research-based critique of over-managed college preparation and its effects on student competence and wellbeing.
Impact: College admission is the first high-stakes, student-owned process that most young people navigate. Parents who do too much (fill out applications, write essays, over-manage extracurriculars) produce applicants who arrive at college unable to manage similar challenges independently; parents who do too little leave students unprepared. The plan below structures meaningful preparation while preserving the student's ownership of the process — which itself develops the independence and self-direction that colleges are selecting for.
Steps
1. Grade 9: Foundation building and exploration
Academic:
- Take the most rigorous track the student can handle well (not at the expense of mental health); A's in honors/AP matter more than C's in AP
- Establish study habits, organization systems, and academic self-advocacy (talking to teachers, asking for help) — these skills will matter more in college than any particular course
Exploration:
- Try 2–3 extracurriculars broadly; do not over-commit or specialize yet
- Focus on genuine interest, not resume value
- Begin part-time or community work if interested; meaningful experience outside school is valued by selective colleges
Testing: no standardized tests yet; PSAT experience is available in Grade 10
Financial planning:
- Begin college financial education: discuss family's general capacity to contribute; introduce concepts of merit aid, need-based aid, and student loans
- Start researching scholarship opportunities in interest areas
2. Grade 10: Building and narrowing
Academic:
- Review first-year GPA and performance; address patterns (specific weak subjects, study habits, time management) before they compound
- Continue rigorous coursework; AP classes become available at most schools; take AP in subject-strength areas first
Extracurriculars:
- Begin narrowing to 2–3 activities with depth; colleges value sustained commitment and growing responsibility over breadth of activities
- Begin seeking leadership roles or deeper involvement in activities that matter to the student
Testing:
- PSAT 10 (used for National Merit Scholarship consideration in Grade 11)
- Consider taking the SAT or ACT at the end of Grade 10 as a baseline test; no stakes, but experience is valuable
3. Grade 11: The most critical year
Academic:
- Strongest academic year matters most to admissions; junior year GPA and coursework is the primary academic signal
- AP exams: prepare and sit for AP exams in courses taken; scores of 4–5 may translate to college credit
Testing strategy:
- PSAT 11 (October): this is the qualifying exam for National Merit Scholarship (high-achieving students should prepare specifically)
- SAT or ACT (spring): primary testing effort; prepare systematically 2–3 months before; consider taking once in March and once in May
- SAT Subject Tests (check if target schools still require — most have dropped this requirement post-2021)
- Decide on SAT vs. ACT: practice tests of both; students perform differently on each; choose based on actual practice scores
College research:
- Begin college list: safety, match, reach segmentation; 10–15 colleges is sufficient; broader list = more work without more options
- Visit campus if possible (summer after junior year is optimal)
- Request informational meetings with school counselor to understand college recommendations
Financial planning:
- Use net price calculators on college websites to estimate actual cost (not sticker price); institutional aid can dramatically change actual cost
- Research external scholarships; apply to those with June–August deadlines before senior year
4. Grade 12: The application year
Timeline:
| Date | Action |
|---|
| August–September | Common App opens (August 1); personal essay draft begins |
| October 15 | FAFSA opens; submit as early as possible (aid is often first-come) |
| October–November | Early Decision/Early Action deadlines (typically November 1 or 15) |
| December | EA/ED results; Regular Decision applications due January 1 |
| January 1 | Most Regular Decision deadlines |
| March–April | Regular Decision results |
| May 1 | National Decision Day; commit and send enrollment deposit |
The personal essay:
- Student writes their own essay entirely; parent reads and provides feedback, but does not write or significantly rewrite
- A good personal essay sounds like the student, not like their parent; admissions officers read thousands of polished, parent-edited essays; the authentic voice stands out
- Prompts are open-ended enough for most authentic topics to work; topic matters less than voice and specificity
Financial aid:
- Compare Financial Aid Award letters carefully; the "best" offer financially is sometimes not the most prestigious school
- Contact financial aid offices at preferred schools to discuss gaps; schools will sometimes match or improve offers
- Discuss student loan implications before committing; understand the difference between subsidized/unsubsidized loans and parent PLUS loans
Common Mistakes
- Over-managing the process: helping a student decide what to do, when, and how produces a student who cannot manage similar challenges independently; give guidance and structure, then step back and let the student execute
- Treating extracurriculars as resume items rather than genuine engagement: college admissions officers have read thousands of applications with strategic activities; the student who did one thing for four years out of genuine passion is more compelling than the student with twelve activities selected for admission value
- Assuming the most selective school is the right school: fit (academic, social, geographic, financial) matters far more than selectivity for outcomes; research shows graduates from match schools perform as well professionally as graduates of elite schools after 10 years
When NOT to Use
- International students: the US college application process for international students differs significantly (international admissions offices, English proficiency requirements, visa considerations, financial aid availability); the framework here applies primarily to domestic US applicants.