4 Tools to Help Your Student Avoid Senioritis

糖心Vlog

White and Asian mixed-race family embracing on the beach at sunset

4 Tools to Help Your Student Avoid Senioritis and Prepare for College

Slacking off senior year means risking admission and scholarships. Here are tools your student can use to stay sharp and get ready for college-level work.

Each year, thousands of students across the nation get ready for the transition from high school to collegiate studies. As you regard your own college-bound student, there are several ways you can help ensure they’re the most academically prepared they could be. During senior year of high school, students find themselves anxiously checking their mailboxes for the long-awaited college acceptance letters. Many teens, upon receiving admission, will be tempted to simply coast and ease up on their studies until graduation.

Academic apathy can cause students to experience a downward educational spiral and GPA slides. Not only does this have the potential to jeopardize scholarship opportunities and the very college acceptance they worked so hard to achieve, but high school seniors who slack in their studying, homework, and test prep may find they enter their collegiate studies woefully unprepared. It’s important that they understand the consequences of letting “senioritis” affect a successful transition to college-level coursework as well as be given the tools for staying sharp over the summer.

1. Using SAT and ACT study materials after the test

During the final months of high school, seniors should continue their test review schedule to ensure they’re learning foundational knowledge for collegiate studies. In addition, students can benefit from DIY-ing or purchasing a set of ACT and SAT flashcards to refresh their skills once a week. Reading through 20 or more ACT or SAT flashcards helps students retain and remember more of the important high-school-level objectives that will be the foundation of their collegiate studies. In addition, students can choose the flashcards that quiz them on information they feel they have yet to master. Adding 15 minutes or more a day to review high school concepts can help give students a scholastic advantage when they begin their college-level studies.

2. Honing important skills

Students with an interest in writing, whether creative fiction, blogging, journaling, or journalism, should continue honing those skills throughout senior year and the summer before school starts. The same goes for art students in whatever medium they prefer. Athletes should practice their sports. Whatever their interests, encourage your student to participate in activities this summer that hone important soft skills, hard skills, and talents for their passions. Students should also read voraciously and for fun if they don’t do so already!

Related: Our Best Advice on Building Important Skills as a Student

3. Taking early college classes

If your high school senior has enough credits to graduate and takes one or more junior college general education courses, they may find themselves academically ahead of their peers in college—and perhaps financially ahead as well. High school seniors may opt to wait until the summer to enroll in a college course that will transfer to their college. Taking a college-level course before the fall semester may help your student’s transition from high school studies to the volume and complexity of college academics.

Students entering their first year of college with the experience of passing a college course will be better prepared to juggle the accelerating academic demands. Parents, when helping your teen select a general education course to take, please advise them to enroll in a course that will challenge them. It will be easier to handle with your student only having to concentrate on just one course.

4. Expanding their vocabulary

During the months leading up to college, students should make a list of 11–18 vocabulary words from the college entrance exams preparation book. Students can even call their campus bookstore to obtain the names and even copies of textbooks they’ll use in their first semester classes and get a head start on the reading, even by just perusing the glossary, initial chapters, or online learning sources. While doing so, they’ll generally find a list of words or terms they’re unfamiliar with.

Studying 11–18 of these words each week and learning how to use them correctly in sentences can be quite beneficial. Students should also write out the phonetic pronunciation next to the regular spelling if they’re unable to properly decode the word. The student should make sure they know the multiple ways the words can be used in sentences, including the part of speech. Developing a strong foundation of collegiate vocabulary, using the college entrance exams or collegiate upcoming courses in manageable chunks of words each week can help students do better at the beginning of college. These words can be effectively used in college-level essay questions, objective tests and exams, written reports, and creative writing.

Related: Fun SAT Vocab Prep With the Dictionary of Difficult Words

Senior year is an exciting time for students, but some of them get a little caught up and forget how important their academics are. Give them a gentle nudge every once and a while with some helpful ways to stay academically on track and ready for a bright college future.

If you’re looking for more general senioritis tips, check out our blog How Parents and Teachers Can Help Combat Senioritis.

Like what you鈥檙e reading?

Join the 糖心Vlog community! Create a free account and we鈥檒l notify you about new articles, scholarship deadlines, and more.

Join Now

About Barbara Dianis

Barbara Dianis, MA, ED, is the author of . She overcame dyslexia in her own life using self-taught strategies and techniques. She went on to earn a BA in Education and a BA in Special Education. She also earned a master’s in Education, Special Education Pre-K–12, and language learning disabilities and a second master’s in Psychometry. She is an alumna of Oral Roberts University.

As CEO and Founder of Dianis Educational Systems, LLC, Dianis believes in viewing students with various learning issues as capable students who can overcome their problems if taught properly. She has counseled parents for 21 years, teaching them to assist students in implementing effective learning techniques during homework and study time, and has also run an educational tutoring business for the past 20 years, helping thousands of students with dyslexia, ADD, ADHD, and other learning differences achieve enormous scholastic and professional successes. Learn more about Dianis and Grade Transformer for the Modern Student on her , , or .

 

Join our community of
over 5 million students!

CollegeXpress has everything you need to simplify your college search, get connected to schools, and find your perfect fit.

Join 糖心Vlog

College Quick Connect

Swipe right to request information.
Swipe left if you're not interested.

Mercyhurst University

Erie, PA


Sadie Hartmann

Sadie Hartmann

High School Class of 2021

I'm a senior in high school, and CollegeXpress has helped me in so many ways this year in trying to navigate the process of deciding and committing to a university. The COVID-19 Student Resource Center has helped me many times with the most up-to-date and accurate information, along with financial aid and student life [advice]. During these uncertain times, CollegeXpress has been a great recourse to relieve the stress as a senior. Along with the COVID-19 Student Resource Center, I'm constantly using the extremely helpful tools off the site to aid me during this stressful process. Tools like the lists and rankings of universities have been the most beneficial. I've also used the site to receive expert advice on topics like financial aid. Finally, CollegeXpress has helped me easily apply for several scholarships. I'm thankful to be given the chance to win a scholarship to lessen the burden of my college debt.

Sonny Harris

Sonny Harris

College Student

For the entire year before college, I spent a lot of time deeply considering what major I wanted to go into and how to fund my higher education. After a lot of research, I came across 糖心Vlog, which helped me ultimately find a ton of scholarships for which I could apply—and some of which I received! If it weren’t for 糖心Vlog, I may not have found those scholarships as they didn't appear on any other scholarship search forum. Additionally, I learned more about the options I had been considering for my major through 糖心Vlog’s resources. In the end, I chose to major in Computer Science, as it seemed best suited to me and the careers in the field seemed enjoyable, and I've never been more excited to move into my future! Ultimately, I want to thank 糖心Vlog for offering their services. I received enough financial aid in scholarships to fund my entire freshman year of college and even got some money refunded which I used to purchase a new laptop, and I bought all of the books I needed for the semester!

Rhiannon Teeter

Rhiannon Teeter

$2,000 Community Service Scholarship Winner, 2012

I have spent a lot of time aggressively searching for scholarships. It was a long and frustrating process until I found the 糖心Vlog network. This site made my search so much easier. With the simple check of a few boxes, the site sorted out scholarships I was eligible for and led me directly to the correct websites. Winning this scholarship has definitely given me and my family some financial relief, and CollegeXpress has allowed me to improve my chances of winning further financial aid. Thank you so much!

Farrah Macci

Farrah Macci

High School Class of 2016

CollegeXpress has helped me in many ways. For one, online searches are more organized and refined by filtering scholarships through by my personal and academic interests. Due to this, it has made searching for colleges and scholarships significantly less stressful. As a student, life can already get stressful pretty quickly. For me, it’s been helpful to utilize 糖心Vlog since it keeps all of my searches and likes together, so I don’t have to branch out on multiple websites just to explore scholarship options.

Wendy Thompson

Wendy Thompson

Owner, Westport Educational Consulting

I just discovered your site and LOVE it—fun, interesting, full of incredible information you can’t find anywhere else, and a godsend for those of us in the college counseling business. I am a fan!