prep - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com Great College Advice Fri, 15 Aug 2025 10:34:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/758df36141c47d1f8f375b9cc39a9095.png prep - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com 32 32 Educational Consultant on Bates 3 of 5: A Welcoming Community https://greatcollegeadvice.com/educational-consultant-on-bates-a-welcoming-community/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=educational-consultant-on-bates-a-welcoming-community Mon, 15 Sep 2014 14:07:40 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=14555 Marks goes to the campus of Bates College to talk about its long-standing ethos of diversity and tolerance.

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College admissions advisor and educational consultant Mark Montgomery talks about Bates College‘s ethos of diversity and tolerance. Even before the American Civil War ended, Bates opened its doors to blacks and other minorities, as well as women. This welcoming spirit continues to this day.
Part of a series on Bates College.
Part 2Part 4

TRANSCRIPT:

One of the other things that I found were interesting about Bates is the history matters. History matters with a lot of these colleges and Bates is very different from most of the other New England colleges in that it was set up by Free Will Baptists. And the Free Will Baptists were committed to ensuring that Bates was a campus that would be welcoming, not only to the local community and to America’s elite.

But also to women, so it was the first college in New England to accept women and also other minorities, including blacks. This was set up before the end of the Civil War, and from the very beginning they accepted freed slaves into the campus community.

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So why does that matter? Well, it’s part of the ethos. It’s part of the way that Bates thinks about itself and presents itself and projects itself into the world, that this is a progressive learning community. It’s an intentional community that has always been diverse. That has always been accepting of people of every stripe, including every religious background, every socioeconomic class, every ethnic background.

So that is just one of the core principles at this college that does set apart a little bit. Everybody’s going to talk about how they’re into being welcoming and tolerant and accepting. And of course that’s part of the American reality today. But Bates has walked the walk from the beginning of its history whereas some of the Ivy League schools, well, all of the Ivy League schools. And many other elite small colleges in New England just didn’t begin that way. So that’s an important part of Bates’ history to keep in mind.

Mark Montgomery
Expert Educational Consultant

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Hate the SAT and ACT? Me Too, But Colleges Still Love These Tests https://greatcollegeadvice.com/hate-the-sat-and-act-colleges-love-these-tests/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=hate-the-sat-and-act-colleges-love-these-tests Mon, 11 Jan 2010 18:22:16 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=3125 Perhaps the most vexing aspect of college admissions in the United States today is the use and abuse of standardized tests.  While there is no solid research to support their pivotal role in determining who is accepted and who is rejected by the nation’s colleges and universities, the fact is that they are a competitive […]

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Perhaps the most vexing aspect of college admissions in the United States today is the use and abuse of standardized tests.  While there is no solid research to support their pivotal role in determining who is accepted and who is rejected by the nation’s colleges and universities, the fact is that they are a competitive credential.  The better your scores, the better your chances of admission.  Of course, high scores alone will not guarantee you anything but a wet, sloppy kiss from your proud parents.  But all other things being equal, good scores are preferable to low ones.
Much has been written about the history of these tests, and we have described the differences between the ACT and the SAT elsewhere on this blog.  Suffice it to say that the growth of these two tests can be attributed to colleges’ need for some sort of thumbnail comparison of students across schools, across states, and across curricula.  The fact is that with 14,000 school districts and perhaps 2,000 more private high schools in the US, there is little standardization from one school to the next. So it has always been difficult to judge the correlation of 4.0 GPA from an inner-city high school on the South Side of Chicago from a 4.0 GPA from Phillips Exeter.  Supposedly, the standardized tests are a leveler–they help admissions folks compare students from different schools in different parts of the country.
Unfortunately, it doesn’t work that way.  Here’s some reasons why.
First, there is no correlation between success on these tests and success in college.  This correlation is generally assumed to exist:  if you do better on the exams, you are therefore smarter and better able to succeed in college.  In fact, research undertaken by Bates College in Maine demonstrates confirms the absence of any such correlation.
Second, the SAT and ACT tests are not “levelers.”  Quite the opposite.  What research we do have on these tests demonstrates that students of lower socio-economic classes do worse on these exams than do students from more affluent backgrounds.
Third, these tests do not really measure either intellectual capacity or aptitude; they  measure performance on these specific tests.  It is possible, therefore, to cram for these tests and improve scores–without taking more high school courses or taking steroids to improve brain capacity.  Thus, a multi-billion dollar test prep industry has developed to help students cram for the tests.  While not all test prep courses or tutoring will lead to a significant score increase, some test prep can lead to dramatic increases.  A recent study from the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) indicates that test prep courses and tutoring will raise scores, on average, by only 20 or 30 points on the SAT tests and perhaps only a point on the ACT.
However, I have seen students make very dramatic gains by working one-on-one with a very experienced, very talented private tutor. Thus my interpretation of the NACAC data is that most test prep is pretty lackluster.  If a student really wants to raise his score, he will have to seek stronger test prep services from those who know what they are doing.
I don’t recommend test preparation for all  my clients.  Much depends on what sort of schools interest them, and whether their first round of testing was good enough to allow them to achieve their goals.  But if their scores fall short of those goals, I will work with them to identify good resources to help them do their best.  For while I don’t think that these scores have much to say about a student’s abilities or potential, they have become very important in competitive college admissions.

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Parents Prep for College https://greatcollegeadvice.com/parents-prep-for-college/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=parents-prep-for-college Wed, 22 Jul 2009 15:42:22 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=2627 As we enter the latter half of the summer, and my graduating seniors prepare to depart for college, parents are preparing for that day in your own ways.  Some parents are going into mourning, while others are doing a little happy dance. I came across this feature in the Boston Globe, which gives some perspective […]

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As we enter the latter half of the summer, and my graduating seniors prepare to depart for college, parents are preparing for that day in your own ways.  Some parents are going into mourning, while others are doing a little happy dance.

I came across this feature in the Boston Globe, which gives some perspective on how parents are preparing for the transition from high school to college.

Parents:  think back to when you left for college.  Did your parents drive you there, or did they (like mine) just put you on a plane and wave goodbye?

How often did you call home?  How often did your parents call you?

Feel free to leave a comment.  Enjoy the rest of the summer!

Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant


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