A S P E C I A L S E C T I O N O F T H E R I V E RT OW N S E N T E R P R I S E - J A N UA RY 1 3 , 2 0 1 7
FINDING THE BEST COLLEGE MATCH When matchmaking makes the grade: which college environment is ‘right’ for you?
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By TRACI DUTTON LUDWIG
t’s one of the most transitional times in students’ and parents’ lives. The shift from high school to college ushers in an important rite of passage, which, for many, is the first major taste of independent life. Just like real life, the admissions process is full of all the excitement and stress that comes from new challenges and uncertainties. First, it’s the application deadlines. Then, it’s the agonizing wait for acceptance decisions. Finally, it’s the student’s choice about which offer to accept, a process that is not always as clear as one might think. With so much pressure about getting into the “best” school, students often forget the subjectivity of the prize. They can easily lose sight of the fact that college selection is a very personal process. FurContinued on page 16A
Technology for students key to the future By MAJA TARATETA
INSIDE 2A Education reading list… for parents 3A Your child’s 1st teacher: you! 7A Eliminating your child's stress 9A Learning values through youth sports 10A Summertime offers unique education opportunities 11A Capture your teen’s authentic self with senior portraits 12A L atest advancements in college happening digitally 14A G etting a handle on college applications 18A E ducation News & Notes
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hen grandparents — and even, gulp, parents — turn to 12-year-olds to recover lost computer login passwords, amend smartphone settings and set up photo-sharing accounts, you know that today’s students, whatever their ages, are more technologically savvy than ever. While schools assign more work that requires the ability to effectively use and master software, apps and other gadgets, and while even textbooks, testing and learning go digital, the question remains: Amid the cacophony of available technology, what software, apps and gadgets are the most important for today’s students to know how to use? Experts say the answer lies in technology that promotes time management and
organization ability and teaches coding. The future, it seems, can’t be denied. “Everything in the school environment is going the way of technology,” said Rob Kissner, president of The Digital Arts Experience in White Plains, which offers STEM and computer programming classes to children and adults. “It’s really important to get into good habits,” when it comes to students using
technology, advised Jonathan Hill, dean of the Seidenberg School of Computer Science and Information Systems at Pace University in Pleasantville. “It can be a creative and learning tool or it can be a binge-watching consumption tool. To be a successful learner, you have to know how to use it with some level of discipline.” When it comes to talking about students and technology, many experts, including Kissner, begin the conversation with one word: Google. Google has a free suite of productivity tools — including Classroom, Gmail, Drive and Docs — that more and more schools in Westchester are utilizing, he said. He noted students throughout the county can benefit from knowing how to navigate the Continued on page 6A