Creating Your College List Dallas TX

Consider instinctively what type of institution seems to fit you best. You may be inclined to stay very close to a city or far from one. Perhaps you learn best in small classroom environments. Your initial instincts can guide you as you explore a few schools and test your assumptions.

El Centro College
(214) 860-2037
801 Main
Dallas, TX
Dallas Theological Seminary
(214) 824-3094
3909 Swiss Ave
Dallas, TX
Southern Methodist University
(214) 768-2000
6425 Boaz St
Dallas, TX
ATI Technical Training Center
(972) 755-4508
6627 Maple Ave
Dallas, TX
Everest College - Dallas
(214) 234-4850
6080 North Central Expressway
Dallas, TX
Wade College
(214) 637-3530
1950 Stemmons Freeway, Suite 2026 INFOMART
Dallas, TX
K D Studio
(214) 638-0484
2600 Stemmons Fwy Ste 117
Dallas, TX
Everest College
(888) 581-9141
6080 N. Central Expressway
Dallas, TX
Aviation Institute of Maintenance - Dallas
(214) 333-9711
7555 Lemmon Avenue
Dallas, TX
Ogle School of Hair Design - Dallas
(214) 821-0819
6333 E Mockingbird Ln Ste 201
Dallas, TX
Data Provided by:
 

Creating Your College List

Creating Your College List

by Howard and Matthew Greene

As with most aspects of the college admission process, you should focus on finding the right balance when you create and revise your college list. If you balance your list in terms of selectivity, geography, and fit, you'll be able to open up some excellent choices for yourself during your senior year of high school.

Starting the list: Consider contrasting types
Exploring only one kind of school will expose you to a very limited set of options. There are several thousand colleges and universities in the U.S. that can be divided into distinct types or models. There are large public universities, small private colleges, two-year community colleges, urban universities, and small-town colleges, to name a few. You can find liberal and conservative environments, traditional and alternative academic programs, and religious and nonsectarian institutions.

Consider instinctively what type of institution seems to fit you best. You may be inclined to stay very close to a city or far from one. Perhaps you learn best in small classroom environments. Your initial instincts can guide you as you explore a few schools and test your assumptions.

The important point is that you should not limit yourself. If you're sure you want a large urban university, then check one out, but make sure to visit at least one smaller college in a more suburban or rural setting.

Author: Amy Ambler

2009 Peterson's, A Nelnet Company. All Rights Reserved

Click here to read more from Petersons