Geographic Diversity: Building Your College List Knoxville TN

Most students are aware that graduates of their high school seem to attend a relatively small group of colleges. These colleges might include a dozen or so of the more competitive institutions, plus a dozen or so public and private schools that have a good reputation in that high school. Perhaps the high school counselor has good relationships with college admission officers at some of those schools and routinely directs students to apply to them.

Tennessee School of Beauty of Knoxville Inc
(865) 588-7878
4704 Western Ave
Knoxville, TN
Tennessee Technology Center at Knoxville
(865) 546-5567
1100 Liberty St
Knoxville, TN
Fountainhead College of Technology
(865) 688-9422
3203 Tazewell Pke
Knoxville, TN
Reuben - Allen College
(865) 966-0400
120 Center Park Dr
Knoxville, TN
ITT Technical Institute - Knoxville
(865) 671-2800
10208 Technology Dr
Knoxville, TN
University of Tennessee
(865) 974-1000
Circle Park
Knoxville, TN
South College
(865) 251-1800
3904 Lonas Road
Knoxville, TN
Pellissippi State Technical Community College
(865) 694-6400
10915 Hardin Valley Road
Knoxville, TN
Johnson Bible College
(865) 573-4517
7900 Johnson Dr
Knoxville, TN
Maryville College
(865) 981-8000
502 E Lamar Alexander Pky
Maryville, TN
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Geographic Diversity: Building Your College List

Geographic Diversity: Building Your College List

By Howard and Matthew Greene

In today's admission environment, it's more important than ever to develop a diverse application group. Including geographic diversity in your list of colleges can help you open up exciting choices that fit your goals and interests. How? Most colleges actively seek students from outside their core geographic area, and most students tend to stay within a few hundred miles of home when attending college.

Avoiding ""the bunching effect""
Many, if not most students we talk with begin their college search within driving distance from home. Two to five hours seems a typical comfort level for most families. Of course, some students start the college process convinced they want to get as far away from home as possible!

Most students are aware that graduates of their high school seem to attend a relatively small group of colleges. These colleges might include a dozen or so of the more competitive institutions, plus a dozen or so public and private schools that have a good reputation in that high school. Perhaps the high school counselor has good relationships with college admission officers at some of those schools and routinely directs students to apply to them.

Creating a diverse college list
What's interesting is the fact that at nearby high schools, let alone schools an hour or two away, the preference lists are usually very different.

Author: Amy Ambler

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