By Casey Near, Collegewise (providing private college counseling)
One of the ways to get the most out of your limited time on a college visit is to ask meaningful
questions. The two most common on-campus experiences for prospective students (the college
tour and the information session) can often be missed opportunities to get a real feel for what
type of student thrives on that campus if a prospective student doesn’t know what questions to
ask.
The questions below can help you learn what you could truly only learn in person, on a campus
visit. And when we talk about "questions," we're not talking about questions that will
somehow magically get you into your dream school. No one got into MIT because they asked a
great question on their tour. These are just good ways to be a more astute college observer and
get a better sense of fit. (Plus, the answers can help you to eventually narrow your list and
write your supplemental essays).
What type of applicant do you get excited about?
This is a great question for an information session and/or to an admissions counselor. It gets to
the heart of the process—the human part of it all. What students catch their eye? Now, this
isn't meant to be asked to unlock some sort of secret formula to get into the school of your
dreams. Think of it as a litmus test. When they list those qualities, do they sound like you or the
people you tend to like? If they don’t, perhaps it's a sign that this college isn't a fit. And if they
do, jot those qualities down. It's a reminder of what you're looking for.
What are the latest most popular or exciting events on campus?
This question gives you a pulse of the campus as it is right now, and it's a good one for tour
guides and admissions officers alike. Maybe it's a protest about a political issue, a big rival
basketball game, or a dance marathon. Whatever it is, it'll give you a sense of what people do
for fun, what people care about, and what gets attention. And if it's a food-based event,
remember that free food is pretty universally popular at colleges, so I'd ask for the next most
popular event.
What qualities would you say your peers here have in common?
If I'd been asked this question as a tour guide, I could have waxed poetic about my peers--
social-justice-oriented, deep-thinking, creative, empathetic, and bold. (If it isn't obvious, I went
to a women's college.) And my guess is the words that any tour guide would use to describe
their peers may not appear on the website. But they'd capture the essence of the student body.
All too often, we tend to assume that the tour guide is an exemplar of all the people at a
college. Sure, they were selected to represent the school, but they don't represent everyone.
Get them to open up about the student body as a whole, not just themselves. What do they
notice as a common denominator?
Taken together, these answers paint a picture of the type of student that the college looks for
and the type of student that thrives there. And, with those answers, you can decide if you fit what they're looking for. If you don’t, don't try to reverse-engineer yourself to fit that mold. But
if it sounds like you’d fit, you'll walk away with a stronger, more specific vocabulary to describe
what you want in your college applications and throughout the college admissions process.
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