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The Fiske Guide to Colleges 2001
Book Description
For nearly two decades, The Fiske Guide to Colleges has been the indispensable source of
information for students and parents all over the country. Candid, lively, and reliable, it speaks with
unique authority covering everything from where a school's history department ranks academically to
where its sports teams rank nationally, from which dining halls should be avoided to which
professors' classes shouldn't be missed.
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College Handbook 2001 (College Handbook, 38th Ed, 2001)
Book Description
The "Bible" of college directories, celebrating its sixtieth anniversary The College Board College
Handbook 2001 includes the award-winning College Explorer CD-ROM. This book/disk
combination gives students the most complete and trusted source of college facts in print, a state-of-
the-art college-search program, and direct links to college Web sites on the Internet. Students can
do customized electronic searches to find colleges with the features they want, and get in-depth
information.
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100 Colleges Where Average Students Can Excel
Book Description
Here is the only college guide designed to meet the needs of students who want a quality education
but need extra help to attain it. It profiles 100 top-quality schools renowned for their innovative
teaching styles, unique curricula, small class sizes, extensive academic services, and abundant
on-campus housing--all features that help average students thrive--and includes information on
admissions, tuition, and enrollment.
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100 Successful College Application Essays
Book Description
The bulk of this book, as its title promises, comprises 100 examples of successful
college-application essays. There are those who believe that reading essays will make you a better
essay writer and those who don't. But reading these essays--and the experts' comments on
them--will help you figure out what you want to write and how best to write it. From the essays
included here, one surmises that the narrower your focus, the more effective the essay, as long as
your narrowness doesn't cross over into insignificance. What matters most is not what you write
about (these essays take on late-night TV game shows, self-induced baldness, the picture on a bag
of Goldfish crackers, a family drive on the New Jersey Turnpike, and even a seven-inch plastic
Godzilla), but what you do with your subject matter. --Jane Steinberg
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