College Terminology
Preparing for College
Paying for College
Types of Colleges
College Student Life
100

This is the type of college credential typically earned at a community college after 2 years as a full-time student

Associates Degree

100

This acronym refers to the numeric average of all of your class grades.

GPA

100

This is the price a college charges for classes.

Tuition

100

This type of college typically serves local students with programs that take two years or less to complete.

Community College

100

Compared to high school, a typical college student spends much less time in class, but much more time on this.

Homework

200

To earn an Associates degree you typically need 60 of these; to earn a Bachelors, 120.

Credits

200

These are the two standardized, college entrance tests taken by high school students that many colleges use in their application review process 

SAT and ACT

200

This is the no-cost form filled out by high school students to apply for all Federal college financial aid

Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)

200

What is the difference between a College and a University?

A university offers graduate (Masters, Doctorate) degrees.

200

This person helps college students pick and schedule classes.

Academic Advisor

300

This document lists all of the classes you've taken, your grades and the amount of credits you've earned.

Transcript

300

These types of classes enable high school students to tackle college-level work and earn college credit and placement.

Advanced Placement (AP)

300

This is the department at a college/university responsible for all student scholarships, grants and loans.

Financial Aid

300

UCLA, Cal State Northridge and Santa Monica College are all examples of this type of college/university.

Public

300

This is the subject that you decide to focus on or study most in college.

Major

400

This is the process by which new students are introduced to a school's resources, services, expectations and norms.

Orientation

400

These are the non-academic activities you participate in during high school that colleges evaluate as part of their admissions process.

Extracurricular activities

400

What is the difference between a loan and a grant/scholarship?

You have to pay back a loan

400

Loyola Marymount University, Pomona College, Claremont McKenna College, and the University of Southern California are all examples of this type of college/university.

Private, non-profit

400

These are the buildings full of rooms where students live.

Dorms or Residence Halls

500

This is the title typically given to the head of a division or school within a college or university.

Dean

500

This is the department at a college/university responsible for deciding which students get in.

Admissions

500

This program gives college students the opportunity to work on campus while earning money to pay for school.

Work study

500

California has 3 public college and university systems.  They are?

The University of California System, the California State University System, the California Community College System

500

This is the department of a college/university responsible for student success, student wellbeing and the overall student experience.

Student Affairs

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