Would you buy a house without touring the property and checking its history? Choosing a college you haven’t visited is the Imax version of that scenario. Unfortunately, out-of-state college visits can mean spending time and money you don’t have and dealing with logistical challenges. Our tips for traveling to out-of-state colleges of interest can help.
You should be putting together a list of prospective college choices by junior year of high school. It’s a good time to start the visits, too. If you really like a school and there’s a decent chance you’ll pick it, plan a visit.
Your circumstances will dictate how many you can check out. Five or six is a reasonable number to visit, enough to yield comparisons but not so many that the experiences begin to blur. Here are some tips to help make the visits productive and simplify the process:
Travel is expensive, especially when plane tickets, multiple destinations, and overnight accommodations are in the mix. There are ways to bridge the dollar gap:
Organizing a different trip to each distant school might be necessary, but it’s costly in terms of time and money. Getting your core list ready as soon as possible makes a big difference here. Once you know your out-of-state targets, you can begin mapping visits.
“Mapping” is precisely what you need to do:
Out-of-state schools within reach of day-trips lend themselves to multiple visits. You can get the big picture, but in pieces. Rushing through a visit at a distant school to get to the next target will leave you with new and unanswered questions and less time and money to address them.
Getting a feel for a campus is easier if you visit at the right time, which mostly means when classes are in session. Late summer, early fall, and spring are good times. Also:
There’s another important consideration on when to go: weather. If choosing a school means adapting to weather you aren’t accustomed to, visiting when the weather usually is at its worst will let you know if it’s a game-changer.
Applicant visits are the way schools close the deal, and they approach them accordingly. At USF:
Most schools will arrange stays in campus housing with students for overnight visitors. You’ll sample the food, living quarters, and amenities while gathering invaluable information from students and others on campus.
You and your parents should team up to absorb the ocean of information needed to make the countless decisions involved in picking a school. Their experience with travel and in other areas can make the trip planning easier and the visit more pleasurable and productive.
Remember, though, that you should be the driving force in this experience. A few tips for parents on how they should approach the visit can make it less likely that they will default to protective parent mode and dominate interactions on campus.
Once you decide to visit a school, it’s time to take the research to the next level. Do what it takes to explore the campus and community more deeply, from the academic offerings to nightlife to geography.
You can connect digitally or directly with chambers of commerce, city halls, and media outlets to learn as much as possible. Social media, from student and alumni forums to Facebook pages, also can give you a look beneath the school’s veneer.
Then there’s the nitty gritty of the trip itself. You’ll need to:
The USF Office of Admissions is ready to engage. Contact us online, or reach us by phone at 813-974-3350.