KAPLAN/NEWSWEEK’S
2005
“HOW TO GET INTO COLLEGE” GUIDE OFFERS ADVICE
FOR A CHANGING ADMISSIONS LANDSCAPE
“America’s 25 Hot Schools” List Revealed:
Haverford Named Hottest for Honor Code
New
York, August 10, 2004 – For high school students, the
past year has been a particularly eventful one, characterized
by a new SAT, changing early decision policies and a shifting
economic and political arena. The 2005 Kaplan/Newsweek
"How to Get into College” Guide reflects the changing
and increasingly competitive college admissions landscape
featuring a list of “America’s 25 Hot Schools”
that recognizes areas such as practical job-centric programs,
schools that embrace and cultivate diversity, emphasis on
quality of life issues and, in this politicized environment,
schools with a military bent.
Designed to provide families with
insight into the college application process, the guide contains
essential admissions strategies, revealed in such articles
as “The Write Stuff,” a before and after look
at a college essay, and “Safety First,” which
provides perspective on drawing up the ideal list of schools.
“Surviving the New SAT” arms students with the
information they need as this new admissions hurdle becomes
a reality in March, 2005. “Helping Hand” profiles
an organization that provides opportunities for low-income
students, while “Diversity 101” focuses on race
and affirmative-action policies. The guide also explores the
latest on a variety of perennially popular campus life topics
ranging from cafeteria cuisine to high tech roommate pairings
to health and safety issues.
This year, Kaplan/Newsweek
has launched an expanded “Hot Schools” list in
the guide, based on admissions trends and extensive interviews
with a broad array of educators, admissions officers, students
and other longtime observers of the admissions process. The
applicant pool for each of these schools has grown much stronger
in recent years – not only in sheer numbers of students
applying, but also in test scores, grades and extracurricular
accomplishments. And although all these schools have demonstrated
continuing excellence, various qualities made many stand out
in 2004.
This year's “Hot Schools”
deserve individual recognition for their choice attributes,
such as specialty programs, state-of-the-art facilities or
comprehensive financial-aid packages. Dream schools come in
all shapes and sizes and the guide spotlights stand-out gems
– public and private, small and large, liberal arts
and tech-focused – that students and parents want to
know about.
This year’s hottest…
• Ivy: Yale University, New
Haven, CT
• School for the arts: Juilliard School, New York, NY
• Big 10: Northwestern University, Evanston, IL
• Library: Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
• Riding school: Hollins University, Roanoke, VA
• Architecture: Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge, MA
• Fitness: University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
VA
• Diversity: Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT
• Tech-savvy: Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH
• Studying abroad: Tufts University, Medford, MA
• Honor code: Haverford
College, Haverford, PA
• Political junkies: George Washington University, Washington,
DC
• Greeks with brains: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
MI
• Double majors: Rice University, Houston, TX
• Hot and dry: Pomona College, Claremont, CA
• State university: University of Texas at Austin
• Getting a job: Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
PA
• Entrepreneurs: Pennsylvania State University, University
Park, PA
• Health careers: UNC/Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC
• Individualists: Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH
• City haters: Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
• City lovers: New York University, New York, NY
• Military school: U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, MD
• Scholarships: Berea College, Berea, KY
• Surf-and-ski: University of California, Santa Barbara
The "Hot Colleges" list
was featured on CNBC's "Power Lunch" program on
Wednesday, August 18. Haverford was among only a small handful
of the 25 "Hot Colleges" included in the segment.