• Trouble logging in? Send us a message with your username and/or email address for help.
New posts

hkem1

Beach Fanatic
Sep 8, 2007
349
42
First, I always wondered why seniors were so stressed about the college admissions process, I figured it can't really be that difficult so take a test and write some essays. Well, I think I was wrong because college applications have pretty much occupied 80% of my daily thoughts since last February and probably will continue to do so until May 1st 2011.

What I would really appreciate though is if any of you possibly have last year's average SAT scores for South Walton High School. If you or your child took the SAT last spring or winter then the average score for his/her school should be on his/her online score report. I would really appreciate this as I am trying to incorporate it into one of my personal statements.

Also, has anyone received their AP scores in the mail yet, they were supposed to be mailed at the beginning of July but I have not received mine yet.

Good luck to anyone, or any parents with children in the Class of 2011. It will all soon be over and the hard work will pay off. And I hope that no matter where each of us ends up, we will all be happy where we are.
 
Last edited:

passin thru

Beach Fanatic
Jun 12, 2007
343
126
One tip for your essays is to be more careful in punctuation & homophone usage.

Such as "last year's average scores" instead of "years" and "their AP scores" instead of "there."

Effective use of their/there/they're, your/you're, and especially of then/than (which aren't truly homophones at all), has eroded rapidly in this country.
 
Last edited:

sunspotbaby

SoWal Insider
Mar 31, 2006
5,000
739
Santa Rosa Beach
One tip for your essays is to be more careful in punctuation & homophone usage.

Such as "last year's average scores" instead of "years" and "their AP scores" instead of "there."

Effective use of their/there/they're, your/you're, and especially of then/than (which aren't truly homophones at all), has eroded rapidly in this country.

I was talking to my sister, a 3rd grade teacher in Georgia, and she told me that they don't even teach spelling anymore. How can you not teach spelling to 3rd graders? :dunno:
Unbelievable how kids today place no importance on proper usage and spelling. I'm afraid no one in America will know that there was ever more than one way to spell
the word 2. :lol:
 

passin thru

Beach Fanatic
Jun 12, 2007
343
126
I was talking to my sister, a 3rd grade teacher in Georgia, and she told me that they don't even teach spelling anymore. How can you not teach spelling to 3rd graders? :dunno:
Unbelievable how kids today place no importance on proper usage and spelling. I'm afraid no one in America will know that there was ever more than one way to spell
the word 2. :lol:

Kids likely won't place importance on those things unless their parents & teachers do.
 

scooterbug44

SoWal Expert
May 8, 2007
16,706
3,339
Sowal
One tip for your essays is to be more careful in punctuation & homophone usage.

Such as "last year's average scores" instead of "years" and "their AP scores" instead of "there."

Effective use of their/there/they're, your/you're, and especially of then/than (which aren't truly homophones at all), has eroded rapidly in this country.

Those things are a HUGE red flag in admission essays. I suggest having an experienced English teacher help your child with their essays - even if they are a good writer who scores well on AP English. I got a 5 on the AP test and still had a teacher help me hone my admission essays.
 

Will B

Moderator
Jan 5, 2006
4,564
1,318
Atlanta, GA
I still have a copy of a memo written by a Manager here who we all felt was "awarded" the job rather than got it on merit. Keeping in mind that it went to higher management, it had misuses like "higher date" rather than "hire date", "quiet" instead of "quite", the usual misuse of "there" instead of "their", and a "to" instead of a "too". The coup de gras, though, was when he said "it was a mute point" instead of "a moot point".

Suffice it to say, all of this came back to haunt him during all of our reductions. He now runs a Merry Maids franchise...
 

hkem1

Beach Fanatic
Sep 8, 2007
349
42
One tip for your essays is to be more careful in punctuation & homophone usage.

Such as "last year's average scores" instead of "years" and "their AP scores" instead of "there."

Effective use of their/there/they're, your/you're, and especially of then/than (which aren't truly homophones at all), has eroded rapidly in this country.


Thank you, I really appreciate your help. :D
 
Last edited:

familyof3

Beach Lover
Mar 18, 2008
248
26
Arkansas
I was talking to my sister, a 3rd grade teacher in Georgia, and she told me that they don't even teach spelling anymore. How can you not teach spelling to 3rd graders? :dunno:
Unbelievable how kids today place no importance on proper usage and spelling. I'm afraid no one in America will know that there was ever more than one way to spell
the word 2. :lol:


They are 3rd graders how do they know what is important. They only know what the teachers are presenting to them. I think we should definetly be questioing why 3rd graders are not taught spelling. Thankfully the loocal shool here still has spelling.
 

Rita

margarita brocolia
Dec 1, 2004
5,207
1,634
Dune Allen Beach
Those things are a HUGE red flag in admission essays. I suggest having an experienced English teacher help your child with their essays - even if they are a good writer who scores well on AP English. I got a 5 on the AP test and still had a teacher help me hone my admission essays.
.
good advice - make no assumptions that all is correct on your essays. Our daughter also is excellent in English but got great feedback from selectively chosen proof readers. They suggested better ways to phrase things to read more clearly and also provided fresh eyes to catch mistakes because she had been writing and rewriting and tiring of the process. Make your essays interesting so they'll be more memorable.

Good luck.


.
 

hkem1

Beach Fanatic
Sep 8, 2007
349
42
A message to all parents of students: Make sure the teacher who writes your child's letter of recommendation actually likes him/her.

I know this sounds obvious enough, but I met with a admissions rep from the University of Texas this morning and she said they regularly get recommendations that "aren't so recommending." My letters have already been written so there is nothing I can do about this now, but I would really make sure the teacher actually likes your child.

I thought it was funny to hear that because I always assumed every teacher wrote good rec's no matter what and that is why colleges don't really care about them very much.
 
New posts


Sign Up for SoWal Newsletter