普林斯顿大学在各种排名中历来名列前茅,是许多学生的理想大学. 不少看来超级强的学生竟然会被其错过。
每一所录取了Jessica 的私校都给她的贺信中提到她是一个全面发展的学生Well-
请来参加明天的讲座。讲座的前半部分,由今年Lynbrook 毕业的Jessica将详细为您分享她高中的生活以及申请普林斯
讲座的下半部分,
All of the colleges which admitted her gave her the same reason:
“A Well-Rounded Student”
What is well-rounded?
How?
Register now : CLICK HERE.
Address: 1340 S De Anza Blvd. Suite 204, San Jose, CA 95129
Time: June 20th, Saturday 7:00-8:30pm.
Fee: $30/person. $50/two family members
Contact: 408-366-2204, spring.light.edu@gmail.com
Who: Jessica Zheng is a recent graduate of Lynbrook High School who will be attending Princeton University this fall as a BSE Computer Science major. She has extensive experience in science/computer science, community service, and visual arts. Some of her achievements include:
- Accepted by MIT, Princeton, Columbia, Carnegie Mellon SCS, UPenn, and Cornell
- Columbia Likely Letter and Egleston Scholar Designation (benefits such as $10K Stipend for research — around a dozen incoming students receive this designation)
- Cornell Likely Letter
- Girls Who Code summer program, interned at eBay, developed an Android app with over 3K downloads
- Founded a non profit organization that uses artwork to teach special needs individuals life skills
- Web and Media Chair of Team HBV at the Stanford Asian Liver Center (leading 40+ high school chapters)
Covering:
- Her overall experience in high school and college admissions
- Academics in high school and course selection
- Taking advantage of opportunities
- Finding extracurricular activities that fit each individual
- Leadership in clubs and organizations
- The college application process, especially as a prospective CS major
- What she think worked for her
- The important role of family support
What you will get out of this workshop:
- How to balance schoolwork and extracurriculars
- How to find activities that are meaningful to you, and how to pursue them
- How parents can help their children
- Relevant advice and insight into the application and admissions process
- What does being well-rounded mean, and why can it help a CS/STEM applicant