The College Solution

6 College Admissions Tips for Artistic Students

November 9, 2010 RSS Feed Print

If your child wants to major in musical theater or some other performing art, go ahead and blame it on Glee, American Idol or America's Got Talent.

Television shows make performing look fun, but the process of applying to colleges as a prospective visual or performing arts major is anything but. For these students, the admission process can be even more nerve wracking and time consuming because of requirements for auditions or portfolios.

To learn more about what's involved in being a prospective visual or performing art major, I talked with Halley Shefler, former dean of admissions at both the Boston Conservatory and the School of Music at Boston University. She is now a college consultant at The Arts Edge, which works with students who want to major in music, theatre, arts, and dance.

Here are six of Shefler's suggestions on how artistic students—and their parents—can navigate the admission process:

[Get more advice from U.S. News's Guide to Admissions.]

1. Don't apply where everybody else is. Ambitious students who are aiming for the same elite schools that are on everyone's short list will usually be disappointed. These schools are overrun with applications and will reject most students. In musical theater, for instance, applicants tend to flock to the University of Michigan, New York University, Boston Conservatory, Carnegie Mellon University, and the College-Conservatory of Music, which is part of the University of Cincinnati.

Other wonderful school in musical theater, Shefler suggests, include Syracuse University, University of the Arts, Elon University, Otterbein College, Point Park University, Millikin University, Montclair State University, and Florida State University.

"You don't need to go to Juilliard, NYU, or the Cincinnati Conservatory to make it in the arts," Shefler emphasized.

[Compare schools specializing in the arts.]

2. Solicit opinions from experts. It's a reality that many stage parents believe their teenagers are far more talented than they are. With inflated opinions of their abilities, Shefler has seen countless teenagers apply to highly selective schools where they have no hope of attending. Families should ask outside experts to critique their students' talent.

3. Look for joint auditions. Going to auditions can be expensive, which is why some schools in the art fields hold joint auditions.

Some schools that offer a bachelor of fine arts program in theatre get together every year to hold a "National Unified Audition." In 2011, the audition will be held on different dates in February in New York, Chicago, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles.

For visual art and design majors, there is "National Portfolio Day." Representatives of schools will review artwork and offer feedback for the students who attend.

4. Consider traditional universities or colleges. For lots of students, art schools and conservatories are going to be unaffordable. Many of these institutions are expensive and yet the financial aid students receive is often modest compared to traditional colleges and universities that offer a broader array of majors.

[See if you will get enough financial aid.]

The Savannah College of Art and Design, for instance, only meets 20 percent of the typical student's financial need, according to College Board statistics. This is a school costs more than $41,000. The New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, where tuition with room and board costs $47,050, typically covers 59 percent of a student's financial need. The Boston Conservatory meets an average of 40 percent of a student's need. In contrast, many elite colleges meet all or nearly all of students' financial need.

[See schools that claim to meet students' full need.]

5. Be prepared for the audition. When you are at an audition, don't wear a T-shirt and jeans. You should also not wear anything that would draw attention away from your performance. You don't need to buy a suit, but consider choosing an outfit that you would wear on a first date, Shefler suggests.

You should also perform appropriate material during an audition. A 17-year-old, for instance, shouldn't perform a piece that requires her to pretend to be a middle-aged woman.

6. Parents, take a chill pill. In this time of high unemployment, more parents than ever seem to be hoping that their children major in something practical like business or engineering. But art majors end up with many desirable skills such as being able to present in front of a group, taking constructive criticism, and being equipped with excellent speaking skills. Remember, what's most important is that students graduate with a degree!

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Can anyone (including the author) provide me with the names of reference sources that are being used to determine which schools are ranked best for undergraduates who are pursuing degrees in the visual and performing arts or is this mostly by word of mouth? I see graduate program rankings but am having little luck in finding undergraduate program rankings.

Many thanks for a quick response.

Angel Broadnax of NY 2:32PM November 17, 2010

It is a Thesis we realized, wrote about it & is now the subject of serious considerations in Developing Countries given the fact that it can contribute at least 50% to any counties' GNP! Of course, most of them has a Ministry of Youth unlike the U.S. where Youth & especially Youth Leadership are in disarray!

Come on, America & those of voting age over 18, push for the creation of an independent U.S.Dept.of Youth whereby the American Youth could & should have a real impact also into their Universities' System. Education? Being again #1? HOW??? If we are subjugated to an awkward political system from Washington down the line to the States AND the College/ Universities system where R&D and the Applied Behavioral Sciences are still ephemeral & subject to special interests and the wrong kind of priorities!

Hence. let's push the Obama Administration to create such an independent entity that will & could remobilize the American Youth into the professional and political fabric of USA so that at least the next generation won't have to put with the idiosyncrasies we now experience & which render our great innovative capabilities into an unhealthy limbo!

The time has come to urgently have a National Youth Conference incl. the Administration, U.S. Congress & all other contributing bodies that could be the first duty & project of the new to become the U.S.Dept.of Youth!!! Come on guys, politicians are messing us & our future into a web that simply makes defections and expatriation a desirable choice against any healthy logic and practicality. Not that abroad things are perfect, but the accents are certainly better applied than in our great America! Or is it still great in

view of what the politicians & the mighty corporations are all about?

And let's intensify the WAR ON IGNORANCE for how else one can explain what's going on today? They are smart people in the White House & the Congress? HA! It doesn't insure

them against ignorance! For how else can they claim one minded political philosophy when many don't know what they are talking about and if they do & do nothing about it, then they are guilty of undermining the American Dream for which our blood is being splashed abroad!

WHY CAN'T IT BE UNDERSTOOD THAT PURE CAPITALISM & PURE SOCIALISM DO NOT WORK PROPER & THAT SOCIAL DEMOCRACY is now practiced with great success in many countries? Hence,

the preservation of CULTURE and the Creative Arts, Wisdom & Sciences are the basis and roots of any advanced civilization!

Ray Arco of CA 11:19AM November 15, 2010

Shoot for the top, if you dont make it too bad. You can always apply to some of the smaller schools as well. Why would you not try going for the best? Theres no chance if you dont even try!

Brock of PA 12:39PM November 14, 2010

The College Solution

Lynn O'Shaughnessy is a higher-ed journalist, speaker and consultant, who is focused on helping families with teenagers find the right colleges at the right price. Lynn is the author of The College Solution, an Amazon bestseller, and a new eBook, Shrinking the Cost of College: 152 Ways to Cut the Price of a Bachelor's Degree. In addition to her U.S. News college blog, Lynn also shares her knowledge about college strategies at her own blog, TheCollegeSolutionBlog, as well as one at CBSMoneyWatch. Got a question? E-mail her at collegesolution@usnews.com or follow her on Twitter.

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