To get a clue about their futures
Marisa O’Neil
Want to study business at Cal State? Cookery at the Culinary
Institute? Law at Harvard? Music at Oberlin?
Even know where Oberlin is?
Newport-Mesa high school juniors and seniors who know exactly
where to send their applications, and those who haven’t a clue, can
get information from more than 100 colleges at College Night on
Tuesday. Organizers for the annual event hope to have something for
everybody this year, from big-time Ivy League schools to small
universities, such as Oberlin in northern Ohio, and everything in
between.
“A lot of kids don’t want to go to college right out of high
school, and some parents can’t afford to send them,” Harbor Council
PTA member Susan Ostrowsky said. “This year, we’re making a real
effort to get kids involved who might want to do community college
programs or certificate programs. We try to approach this from every
angle.”
For the last 10 years, the PTAs from Corona del Mar and Newport
Harbor high schools have alternated hosting the annual event in the
schools’ gyms. This year, the district has stepped in to help expand
College Night, which will take place at the Orange County Fair and
Exposition Center in Costa Mesa.
Besides representatives from Big Ten and Pac 10 schools, Ivy
League Universities and the University of California and California
State systems, students can investigate small, private universities,
community colleges and art schools.
Organizers have also made a special effort to reach more students
this year by including trade and technical schools, said Barry
Barowitz, director of secondary curriculum and instruction for the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
Having about 125 educational institutions represented will open
students to a wide range of possibilities, he said.
“It’s almost like going to a huge car show and being able to get
information on every product,” Barowitz said. “There will be
representatives there to tell people everything they want to know
about individual colleges and universities, like the application
process, courses of study and student life.”
Students will be able to pick up information on financial aid and
student loans, Ostrowsky said. Many private colleges that will be
there offer scholarships, she said.
“It doesn’t just have to be UC and Cal State [for students],”
Ostrowsky said. “We want everyone to think of all the options.”
Event Chair Lisa George said that they hope to reach students who
may be the first in their families to attend college. Busses will
shuttle parents and students from Ensign High School and the Costa
Mesa Community Center to the event, and translators will be on hand
to cut through language barriers some parents might face.
“We’re trying to get kids interested in taking the first step,”
George said. “This is the computer age, with virtual tours of schools
online. But this puts a human face on a college, makes it more
reachable. They can actually talk to someone who’s a part of the
staff or someone who went to that school.”
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