Every year in August and September, if you listen close, you can hear the mad keyboard tapping of tens of thousands of local high school seniors rushing to enter their information into the Common App and get started on their college applications. The Common App opened on August 1, which means it’s college application time!
Over 1.2 million students submitted almost 7 million applications through the Common App last year, a 5% increase from 2023. This year is supposed to break new records as well. If you have a senior at home, they should be hard at work getting these applications in before early admission deadlines (some, like UNC-Chapel Hill, are as early as October 15). To be prepared for this stage of the college admission game, seniors should have a final college list with 6-12 schools that meet the following three priorities for a school deemed a “good fit”:
- Academic Fit: Schools that fit your academic needs will offer appropriate challenging courses and rigor, the majors and career programs that you want to explore or choose, preferred class size, academic assistance (tutoring or accommodations), and internships or research opportunities.
- Social Fit: Priorities that fit your social needs could be the community size or location of the campus (near to or far from home, rural or urban), sports scene, percent of Greek life, religious ties, and other campus life aspects.
- Financial Fit: Schools that fit your budget or offer aid to meet your budget.
These well-suited, great-fit schools you find should then fall into three match categories for admissions likelihood:
- Highly Likely Admission (Safety): Students’ GPA, expected course rigor, and test scores fit are well above the average of other accepted students for these schools.
- Likely Admission (Target): Students’ GPA, expected course rigor, and test scores fall into the average range of other accepted students for these schools.
- Unlikely Admission (Reach): Students’ GPA, expected course rigor, and test scores fall below or on the low end of the range of other accepted students.
Seniors who plan to apply to college should have 2-4 well-suited/good-fit schools in each admission category (e.g., 3 Safety/Highly Likely, 3 Likely/Target, and 3 Reach/Unlikely) before August. Sophomore and Junior years are when most prospective college students want to research, visit, and create their school lists. Like anything else, getting an early jump on applications by doing a lot of planning and preparation prior to the senior year, makes the fall application time a lot less stressful.
Feel free to reach out with questions for our College Q&A column!








