Juniors: End-of-Year Planning Tips Columbia SC

Colleges can infer a great deal about you from the way you make curricular choices. In particular, they want to see evidence that you are continuing to stretch yourself academically. A lot of students enter senior year content with having ""satisfied graduation requirements"" in one or more of the major disciplines.

Benedict College
(803) 256-4220
1600 Harden Street
Columbia, SC
Harley's Beauty & Barber Career Institute
(803) 254-0050
1510 Ontario Street
Columbia, SC
ITT Technical Institute - Columbia
(803) 216-6600
720 Gracern Rd Ste 120
Columbia, SC
Southeastern School of Neuromuscular Massage - Columbia
(803) 798-8800
1420 Colonial Life Blvd, Suite 80
Columbia, SC
W L Bonner College
(803) 754-3950
4430 Argent Ct
Columbia, SC
Allen University
(803) 254-4165
1530 Harden Street
Columbia, SC
University of South Carolina
(803) 777-7000
Columbia, SC
Kenneth Shuler School of Cosmetology & Nails
(803) 772-6042
449 Saint Andrews Rd
Columbia, SC
Columbia College - South Carolina
(803) 786-3012
1301 Columbia College Dr
Columbia, SC
South University
(803) 799-9082
9 Science Court
Columbia, SC
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Juniors: End-of-Year Planning Tips

Juniors: End-of-Year Planning Tips

by Peter Van Buskirk

If seniors find themselves walking an academic tightrope at this time of the year, juniors are about to face a moment of truth as well. It will come in the form of course registrations for next year. If you are a high school junior, you can demonstrate a ""passion for learning"" with the courses you choose for your senior year.

Colleges can infer a great deal about you from the way you make curricular choices. In particular, they want to see evidence that you are continuing to stretch yourself academically. A lot of students enter senior year content with having ""satisfied graduation requirements"" in one or more of the major disciplines. You've no doubt heard the talk among your friends: ""I've already had four years of language starting in eighth grade,"" or ""I've satisfied my math requirement for graduation,"" or ""the sciences aren't for me."" What usually follows next? ""So I don't have to take any more in my senior year."" Before you find yourself saying the same thing, take a moment to think about what the choices you make say to your prospective colleges.

Here is another way to think about it. Each year, as you have moved through the educational system, you have shown that you are proficient in dealing with the rigor of the program for that year. Your reward? Promotion to the next level, where you are given a new set of challenges.

Author: Amy Ambler

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