Academics

College Advising

Our Philosophy

Navigating through the college search process is a personal journey that the school and faculty support from the very day that a student enrolls into the Andrews Osborne Academy program. Through each and every step along the way, a student is prepared to make college decisions as a result of their unique academic and extra-curricular experiences in and out of the classroom at AOA.
Our approach to college counseling is to guide students in the college search, the application, and the selection process. At AOA, we have a 4-year college counseling advisory curriculum. By starting the college process at the beginning of high school, it is our belief that our students will be better prepared to make well informed and thought-out choices regarding their college fit and major.  By the spring of their junior year, when the formal college search process begins, our students will start this phase of their life feeling confident and well informed.
 
We will support our students in researching and identifying a range of colleges well suited to their interests, needs, and abilities. It is expected that the student will take an active role in the process of discovery in their own way and to find avenues to challenge themselves in their efforts of selection. It is important to note that there is no singular “right” college for a student. A number of colleges would be wonderful matches, and our collective goal is to identify a good student-college match.

While there are multiple resources available to our students to assist them in the college process, they are not intended to replace the personal advising they will receive from their academic advisor and the college counselor. We are available to support the student in every way we can, and we encourage and invite students and their parents to work collaboratively with us to ensure that all parties are well- supported in the college search, application, and decision process.

College Counselor

List of 1 members.

  • Photo of Melissa Nipper

    Melissa Nipper 

    Director of College Counseling
    Biography
    • HBCU College Fair

College Advising

List of 3 events.

Timeline

List of 4 items.

  • 9th grade Freshman Year

    • Build strong academic, language, mathematics, and critical thinking skills by taking challenging courses
    • Take the PSAT in October/ the results will not be used for college admission
    • Study hard and get good grades
    • Learn time management and study skills
    • Strengthen your vocabulary by READING
    • Participate in the classroom
    • Become involved in extra-curricular activities
    • Begin to browse through college literature
    • Check out what courses colleges require
    • Know your NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) requirements to play sports in college
    • Keep an academic portfolio and co-curricular record
    • Begin saving money
    • Register with Naviance and complete the assigned tasks
    • Create virtual portfolio and continue to add to it
  • 10th grade Sophomore Year

    • Concentrate on academic preparation and continue to develop basic skills and co-curricular interests
    • Take the practice ACT in October/ the results will not be used for college admission
    • Take NCAA approved courses if you want to play sports in college
    • Sign up for co-curricular activities that interest you/the level of involvement is important not the number of activities
    • Keep a record of your activities, volunteer work, and employment
    • Meet with your advisor in the spring to schedule classes
    • Develop a relationship with your teachers (you may need to ask them for a recommendation) Be productive over the summer by getting a job, taking a class, or engage in community service
    • Complete the assigned tasks on Naviance
    • Continue to add to your virtual portfolio
  • 11th grade Junior Year

    • Continue to focus on your classes- your junior grades are very important for the college admissions process
    • Continue with your extra-curricular activities and be consistent
    • Make time for a formal meeting with your college counselor
    • Continue to develop solid relationships with your teachers
    • Develop a relationship with your teachers (you may need to ask them for a recommendation)
    • Be productive over the summer
    • Attend college fairs, college visits and general informational sessions
    • Make sure you are NCAA compliant if you want to play Division I or II in college
    • Complete the assigned tasks on Naviance
    • Continue to add to your virtual portfolio

    Important Events for the Year


    September
    • Attend meetings with college representatives visiting the school
    • Begin meeting 1:1 with college counselor
    October
    • Take the PSAT. These scores do not go to colleges but are considered for National Merit recognition
    • NCAA review for student athletes
    • Attend meetings with college representatives visiting the school
    November
    • Attend meetings with college representatives visiting the school
    December/January
    • Plan to register for the March SAT and April ACT
    • Begin Advisory meetings about College Counseling
    February/March
    • Naviance, college research, career testing, and questionnaires
    • Schedule College Visits
    April
    • Schedule College Visits
    • Optional Parent meetings
    • Case studies and College Fair
    • Begin Common Application
    May/June
    • FINAL SAT and ACT test for the school year
    • Ask your teachers for recommendation letters
    • Complete teacher and counselor questionnaire
  • 12th grade Senior Year & Postgraduate

    Your senior year grades are reported to colleges, so be sure to continue working hard

    Important Events for the Year


    August

    • Optional Meetings for seniors and parents
    • Confirm that you have added your teacher recommenders to Naviance
    • Link Naviance with the Common Application
    • Begin the Common Application
    September/October

    • Solidify a list of colleges to which you will be apply under Early Decision, Early Action, Rolling, or any other Fall deadline admissions program
    • Optional Meetings for seniors and parents
    • Attend meetings with college representatives visiting the school
    • Attend Financial Aid night
    • Complete the FAFSA and CSS profile
    • Senior College Counseling Boot Camp
    • Optional: Arrange interviews, auditions, portfolio reviews, campus visits, overnight visits
    • Work with your counselor on applications and essays
    • Continue working on scholarship applcaitions
    November

    • Early Applications are due
    • Optional: Arrange interviews, auditions, portfolio reviews, campus visits, overnight visits
    • Check application portals and email accounts regularly to make sure none of your materials are missing or need to be resent
    • SAT and ACT testing
    • Work with your counselor on applications and essays
    December/January

    • Decisions for most fall applications are released
    • Work with your counselor on applications and essays
    • Regular Decision and Early Decision II applications are due
    March

    • Check application portals and email accounts regularly to make sure none of your materials are missing or need to be resent
    • Final admissions decisions will be released by early April
    April

    • Attend admitted student programs and receptions!
    • Continue working on Common Application
    • Start  working on scholarship applications
     
    May

    • May 1 is the national deadline for depositing. Choose one school and submit your enrollment deposit
    • Advanced Placement Examinations
    • COMMENCEMENT

Additional Information

List of 4 items.

  • Grades 10-12 & PG Parent/Guardian Meetings

    Beginning in the second semester of the junior year, the College Counseling advisor begins meeting with students 1:1. These meetings are designed to help the students individualize their college search and application process as well as give an overview of the college timeline, course selections, extra-curricular opportunities, standardized testing, athletic recruitment, and college resources. The groundwork for the college application process will be set up to help students and parents/guardians understand what is expected. 
     
    Although a great deal of information is conveyed during grade by grade college cohort sessions (for grades 9-12) and the 1:1 meetings with students, in both their junior and senior year, the college counselor encourages any parent/guardian of high school students to reach out to schedule a meeting individually. These meetings typically lay the groundwork for course suggestions,  college visits, testing schedules, financial aid, and other detailed information.
  • Case Studies and College Fair

    Andrews Osborne Academy, along with the other CCIS (Cleveland Council of Independent Schools), offer many opportunities for parents and students to learn more about the college process. We invite college and university admissions representatives from around the country to meet with parents and students. Participants are given mock applications, complete with essays, recommendations, interview evaluations, and activities. The admissions officers lead the small groups through the application review process and conduct mock admission committee meetings using parents and students as their committee. The mock applications will provide information for good conversation in order to weigh the pros and cons of each candidate. This exercise, under the guidance of an expert admissions officer is a great opportunity for our families. Following the session, a college fair is held, allowing students and families the opportunity to learn about schools and to talk with admissions officers. In addition, AOA and the CCIS will have a financial aid night in the fall and an event focused on how to navigate the college process in the winter.
  • Athletic Recruitment

    Andrews Osborne Academy routinely has a number of athletes who pursue the opportunity to be student athletes at the collegiate level. Our students have gone on to play Division I, II and II levels as well as NAIA. We will work with our student athletes to help educate them about college athletics and the role they may have in the college process for the student. The College Counselor works closely with the Athletic Director and Coaches during this process. Students seriously considering the playing a Division I. II, or III sport in college need to check out the student athlete recruiting information at www.ncaa.org before proceeding with recruiting efforts.
  • Naviance

    Naviance is a web-based college research and planning tool for students, parents and school counselors. The website manages individual students through the entire college planning, application, and decision process. Students can search for scholarships, explore careers, track admission data for colleges across the United States and also gauge their chances of acceptance by comparing personal GPA/ACT/SAT statistics with those of recent AOA successful applicants. All students and parents, beginning in the freshman year, will have access to Naviance.
     
    What does Naviance do?

    • Naviance Curriculum provides sequential lessons and activities involving the following themes: self discovery, success skills, support network, career planning, college planning, and financial planning
    • Searches and matches colleges by specific data
    • Compares colleges
    • Displays scatter grams and application statistics from AOA giving students an idea of how their numbers compare to those of past students accepted
    • Compiles college plans
    • Tracks application deadlines
    • Details the list of colleges visiting AOA
    • Lists scholarship opportunities
    Click HERE to access Naviance Student.

Frequently Asked Questions

List of 7 frequently asked questions.

  • What is the goal of college counseling?

    College counseling success occurs when all parties work collaboratively to find the best college match for the student. Students will be encouraged to take advantage of the wide range of choices available to them.

    During the early years of their journey into high school, students will work informally and in partnership with the advisory system. Topics such as self-assessment, course planning, balancing an extra-curricular life, and standardized testing will be discussed. Formal college counseling begins in the winter of the junior year and continues up through your final college decision.

    During the 4th quarter of the 2020 school year, student learning went virtual per the orders of the Governor of OH. The virtual learning experience for AOA students was both synchronous and asynchronous. Students still received letter grades. Students did not take final exams so the 3rd and 4th quarter grades were averaged together to award the second semester grade and for full year courses, the first and second semester grades were averaged to make the final grade.   
  • Do colleges know about us and do they understand our curriculum?

    An important part of a college counselors job is to establish relationships with college admissions and to explain to them what AOA is all about.  We attend many regional and national conferences, visit colleges, and work hard to establish a connection with the colleges in order for them to understand AOA and our student population.

    Each year we have colleges and universities visiting the AOA campus to meet with students and to learn about our school. We provide an overview and a
    school profile that describes our admissions process, our academic programming and graduation requirements.

    Our academics go beyond the traditional at AOA. Our Creative Thinking Initiative(CTI) encourages and allows students to think not just critically but also forces them to think creatively.  Students bend, break, and blend traditional knowledge in order to explore concepts at a deeper level.Students are encouraged to think, act, take risks, and
    from not being afraid to take risks, and perhaps fail, learn beyond the typical academics taught in the classroom. They develop the ability to be both creative and critical. These two components come together to set our students up for success in any future endeavor.
  • Does AOA rank its graduating class?

    AOA does not rank its students; our class size is too small and this statistic would be misleading. Most independent schools do not rank their graduates, so this is a practice colleges are familiar with.
  • Test Prep? Should I take it?

    AOA actively supports test prep through our decision to have 9th and 11th graders take the PSAT and the 10th graders take a practice ACT. The results from the PSAT will help a student identify their areas of weakness and allow them to proactively strive to improve their experience and knowledge in those areas. Formal test prep is not encouraged prior to the junior year PSAT.

    It is less likely that a student will improve significantly in subsequent testing if their initial test score is high. Students are encouraged to read…read…read…as this has proven to help improve verbal scores. The library at AOA has a number of practice books available for student use and the college counselor can provide additional resources for the student to use. AOA has SAT and ACT prep available on campus through a test prep academy.
  • What are the most important components to a college application?

    Colleges will evaluate applicants in many different ways and place emphasis on different aspects of each application based on the school’s admission criteria and policies. Some schools are very holistic in their evaluation process while other schools will place more emphasis on standardized test scores and GPA. For all colleges, there is one area that holds true in terms of importance. The strength of a student’s academic record, the rigor of courses taken, the quality of the work completed, and the consistency and pattern of improvement from year to year are very important factors for any college application.
  • Are recommendations or personal references important?

    Recommendations from the college counselor and from teachers are considered important pieces to the college application. Student recommendations are written to provide a perspective that is unique to the student and as a valuable tool in the evaluation process.
  • What factors is financial aid based upon?

    There is money available to students for college and it is awarded in different ways. The FAFSA is a tool that is used by most colleges to determine if you qualify for aid based on parent income. Other forms of aid like a merit scholarship could be awarded based upon a strong high school transcript and /or standardized test scores. Each institution determines financial assistance on an individual basis.

Welcome College Representatives

Andrews Osborne Academy welcomes visits from college admission representatives. To schedule a visit, please log into RepVisits. You will need to create an account if you do not have one. Select Andrews Osborne Academy and select the time that works best for you. Please contact Melissa Nipper at mnipper@andrewsosborne.org or 440-942-3600 ext. 117 if you have any questions.

A note when traveling to Andrews Osborne Academy: the College Counseling office is located in the Lee Building in the Upper School office. Please use 38588 Mentor Avenue, Willoughby, OH 44094 when using GPS.
Andrews Osborne Academy

Andrews Osborne Academy

38588 Mentor Avenue
Willoughby, Ohio 44094
Grades Preschool - 12, PG
 
P. (440) 942-3600
F. (440) 942-3660
Located In Willoughby, OH, Andrews Osborne Academy is a Private Co-ed Day & Boarding College Preparatory School For Grades Preschool - 12, PG. Students benefit from a challenging academic program, fine and performing arts, competitive athletics, and a wide selection of extracurricular activities.