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Randolph High School

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Wisconsin Colleges/Entrance Exams

Wisconsin Universities and Colleges

 

UW System Electronic Application

  • Cost - varies with application type
  • Applications are accepted starting in September
  • Print out Counselor's Form and submit to your school counselor
  • Notify counselor and complete a Transcript Request Form
  • Make sure official ACT and/or SAT scores were sent to the college's admissions office
  • Apply early - Priority dates will be different for every school

UW System Help

This site contains information on all the institutions in the University of Wisconsin System including 13 universities, 13 freshman-sophomore Colleges and UW-Extension.

UW Campuses

A direct link to each of the schools in the UW system.

Wisconsin Private Colleges

A Mentor system is an online resource to help students and their families select a college, apply for admission, and plan to finance higher education. WisconsinMentor offers access to information and admissions applications for independent colleges and universities within Wisconsin. When a student applies for admission to a college or university, he or she is charged a standard fee by the school; otherwise, Mentor systems are provided free-of-charge.

Wisconsin Technical Colleges

  • Cost to apply varies per school
  • Apply Online or by paper application
  • Submit official transcripts with your application
  • Schedule to take the COMPASS/ACCUPLACER test or other placement tests per technical college requirements

The Common Application

Now in our fourth decade, the Common Application currently provides both online and print versions of its First-year and Transfer Applications. Our membership of more than 300 institutions now represents the full range of higher education institutions in the US: public and private, large and small, highly selective and modestly selective, and East Coast, West Coast, and every region in between.

Entrance Exams – Testing

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Most colleges and universities require admissions tests for students seeking admission. The ACT is the most commonly used entrance exam for students in the Midwest. Students seeking admission to schools on the East Coast or West Coast often times take the SAT. Either test will suffice when applying for admission to any college or university. When registering for the ACT or SAT, students will need to use the school identification code: 501-935.

ACT®

The ACT¨ test contains four curriculum-based, multiple choice tests that measure academic achievement in the areas of English, mathematics, reading, and science, as well as an optional Writing Test, for which students complete an essay.

  • English Test (45 minutes)
    • The English Test measures the student's understanding of the conventions of standard written English (punctuation, grammar and usage, and sentence structure) and of rhetorical skills (strategy, organization, and style). Spelling, vocabulary, and rote recall of rules of grammar are not tested. Three scores are reported: a total test score, a subscore in Usage/Mechanics, and a subscore in Rhetorical Skills.
  • Mathematics Test (60 minutes)
    • The Mathematics Test assesses the mathematical skills that students have typically acquired in courses taken up to the beginning of grade twelve. The test requires students to use their reasoning skills to solve practical problems in mathematics. The problems assume knowledge of basic formulas and computational skills but do not require memorization of complex formulas or extensive computation. The use of calculators is permitted on the Mathematics Test. Four scores are reported: a total test score, a subscore in Pre-Algebra/Elementary Algebra, Intermediate Algebra/Coordinate Geometry, and Plane Geometry/Trigonometry.
  • Reading Test (35 minutes)
    • The Reading Test measures the student's reading comprehension as a product of referring and reasoning skills. The test items require the student to derive meaning from several texts by 1) referring to what is explicitly stated and 2) reasoning to determine implicit meanings and to draw conclusions, comparisons, and generalizations. The test comprises four prose passages that are representative of the level and kinds of writing commonly encountered in college freshman curricula. The passages are selected from published sources. Three scores are reported: a total test score, a subscore in Arts/Literature reading skills (based on the prose fiction and humanities sections), and a subscore in Social Studies/Sciences reading skills (based on social studies and natural sciences sections).
  • Science Test (35 minutes)
    • The Science Test measures the student's interpretation, analysis, evaluation, reasoning, and problem-solving skills required in the natural sciences. The test is made up of seven sections, each of which consists of some scientific information (the stimulus) and a set of test items. The scientific information is conveyed in one of three different formats. One score, a total test score, is reported for the ACT Science Test.
  • Cost: ACT (No Writing): $39.50 & ACT + Writing: $56.50
  • Registration website
  • Testing Dates, Time, and Locations

 

SAT

  • Nearly every college in America accepts the SAT or Subject Tests as a part of its admissions process. That's why more than two million students take the SAT every year.

PSAT

  • The Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT¨) is a rigorous, national assessment that measures the critical reading, mathematics, and writing skills for junior students and high achieving sophomores for higher education and careers after high school. Last year, over 23,000 schools opened the door to college for over 3.4 million students by administering the PSAT/NMSQT. Please see Mrs. Medema if interested in taking the PSAT.

 

UW System Placement Testing

  • The UW Center for Placement Testing coordinates the University of Wisconsin Placement

Testing Program for all campuses in the University of Wisconsin System.