What Not to Ask During Your First College Visit
The college visit: a pivotal moment where aspirations meet reality. As you step onto campus, you're not just assessing the institution; you're also being scrutinized as a potential addition to their community. It's a dance of impressions and expectations, and missteps can have lasting consequences. Here are some questions that, while perhaps amusing in other contexts, are best left unasked during your inaugural college exploration:
On your college visit, remember you're a guest. Act accordingly. Inappropriate questions can flag your application and lead to denial, regardless of your qualifications. So, mind your manners, and save the quirky queries for another time. Your future self will thank you.
Accolades: Awards, honors, or recognitions given for achievements.
Adherence: The act of following or sticking to a rule, requirement, or guideline.
All-State Ensemble: A prestigious music group composed of top student musicians from a state, selected through an audition process.
Audition: A performance test where a student demonstrates their skills for evaluation, often required for acceptance into music programs.
Deviation: Straying away from a set rule, requirement, or expectation.
Ensemble: A group of musicians who perform together, such as a choir, band, or orchestra.
Mandate: An official requirement or rule that must be followed.
Meticulous: Extremely careful and precise, paying close attention to detail.
Paramount: Extremely important or crucial.
Pre-Screening Video: A recorded performance submitted before an audition to determine if a student qualifies for the next stage of the selection process.
Repertoire: A collection of pieces a musician is prepared to perform.
Recruiter: A person representing a school who communicates with potential students about opportunities, auditions, and admission requirements.
Sacrosanct: Extremely important or sacred, not to be ignored or changed.
Unwavering: Showing strong, firm commitment without hesitation or doubt.
Vigilance: The act of staying alert and paying close attention to important details.
Objective: Students will evaluate the importance of professionalism and appropriate communication during college visits, and craft thoughtful, respectful questions to ask during campus tours and interviews.
Assignment Prompt
Read the article “Etiquette Matters: What Not to Ask During Your First College Visit” on Accoladi.com. Then, in your own words:
Inspired by the hilariously real article “Etiquette Matters: What Not to Ask During Your First College Visit” — now live on Accoladi.com!
Dear Band Parents,
I love y’all. I really do. You’ve brought juice boxes to parades, patched uniforms with duct tape, and driven across three counties chasing school buses like we’re the Rolling Stones on tour.
But now, it's time for a heart-to-heart.
Your young musician is looking at colleges — and that means college visits are on the horizon. It's exciting. It’s important. And it’s potentially a disaster if we don’t rein it in a little.
That’s why I’m begging you — no, pleading with you — to read the article on Accoladi.com titled “Etiquette Matters: What Not to Ask During Your First College Visit.” You’ll laugh, you’ll cringe, and you’ll realize just how easy it is to become that parent.
Need a taste? Here are real questions parents asked during college visits — and folks, I’m not making this up:
Look, I get it. College is expensive, confusing, and competitive. But when you show up asking if your child can only play music with the white notes, you're not opening doors — you’re slamming them shut, bolting them, and setting off the security alarm.
Let’s keep the focus where it belongs: your amazing, hardworking kid. Let them shine. Ask about the program. The faculty. The opportunities. The practice rooms. Not the professor’s marital status, local relatives, or gas mileage.
And please — please — don’t negotiate the terms of your child’s theatrical destiny with a legally binding contract over Chick-fil-A in the admissions lobby.
Again, this gem of an article is called “Etiquette Matters: What Not to Ask During Your First College Visit.” Find it on Accoladi.com and do yourself (and your child) a favor. Read it before you open your mouth on that campus tour.
We’ll all be better for it — and your student might just get that scholarship without being remembered for the wrong reasons.
With affection, humor, and just a dash of fear, I am . . .
Your Friendly Director
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(Director’s Name)
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(School Name)