Student Outlook -- Lea Alfi
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Ah, the season of college applications has come to its close and the
slew of financial aid filings is now upon us. But before the feats and
foibles of thousands of teens is forgotten in one fowl swoop, let us
reminisce the high points of the once in a lifetime, unpleasant for some,
tour de force of college applications:
Large envelopes arrived at our homes midsummer, envelopes we had heard
of before. They remained unopened, to preserve for all of posterity,
until our parents opened them for their posterity. Once opened, we were
welcomed with genius questions, which needless to say, demanded genius
answers.
Question one: Name. This sounded simple enough for hundreds of teens
until, of course, first name was first rather than last name first and,
suffice to say, pen not pencil, was used first. A tip from an older
applicant was to first go over the application in pencil, then in pen. Of
course, doing the UC application online was one of the best decisions
because the online program corrected and saved the application as you
went on.
Once the fill in the blanks were done, it was on to the meat of the
application, the essay! The first essay: What is the most meaningful
object in your life? What did this question entail? Do they want to be
shocked or are they begging sincerity? Do you write about your Chinese
noodle bowl that says “suck it” or your grandmother’s diary that says
“sweet iterations?”
One of the most common essays was on the symbolic nature of a teen’s
car -- freedom and whatnot. A car is a great object to write on so long
as the essay is unique enough to leave an impression.
On to essay No. 2: Imagine you have just completed a 300-page
autobiography. Submit page 217. Does it matter if this is a left or right
page? Can it be an illustration? Who completes an autobiography before
they are 18 anyway?o7 Is this optional?!f7
Essay three: Explain something you just wish you understood better.
Hmm, the mass of college applicants must have thought in unison: This is
my time to be clever! I’ll write that I wish I understood the college
admissions process better! But alas, the prompt continues to say “As
tempted as you may be, do not choose the college admissions process.” And
thoughts of cleverness left like birds from a nest as they were replaced
by thoughts of a discourse on a simile of cliches.
Next came the time to postmark the five-page package they prefer you
to fit into a business size envelope and mail by the recommended
deadline. A job 34 cents should cover, after copies are obtained and a
certificate of mailing still pending is finally complete. The postmark
deadline is Dec. 30. You proudly pull up to the U.S. Post Office, never
so happy to see government property as now and, as glee sets in, you
realize the post office is not open on Sundays. But it’s a good thing you
got that other application in at exactly 2:58 p.m. when the post office
closed at 3 on Saturday, Dec. 15 (the final, not recommended deadline).
Otherwise, you would have had to venture to the always-open LAX post
office.
Wow, after this reflection, I know I am ready for the world of
financial aid. FAFSA, CSS, CalGrant, yeah I’m ready for you. Bring it!
Acronyms won’t stop me, give me that EFC (Expected Family Contribution)
you estimate so well. I’m ready for my SAR (Student Aid Report). I have
until FEB to navigate the myriad of questions (March 2 for the CalGrant).
Yeah, I said FEB (Financial Education Burden).
* LEA ALFI is a senior at Costa Mesa High School where she is
editor-in-chief of the Hitching Post. Her columns will appear on an
occasional basis in the Community Forum section.
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