June 3, 2026

By this point in the process, most juniors will tell me they have a college list.
Sometimes that is true. More often, it means they have a few schools they like and a few others they have heard of, and it feels like a list because there are enough names on it.
What I am usually trying to figure out in that first conversation is not how many schools are on the list, but whether the list actually gives the student options next spring.
That comes down to two things. Where the student is likely to be admitted, and what those schools are likely to cost.
Most families are at least somewhat familiar with the idea of having a mix of schools. You will hear people talk about likely, target, and reach schools, and that is a useful starting point. The issue is that those categories are often based on assumptions rather than anything specific to the student.
A school that feels like a target because it is well known may actually be more competitive than people realize. Another school that gets less attention locally might be a much stronger fit both academically and financially.
That is why simply having a mix of schools is not the same thing as having a balanced list.
The part that is almost always missing is the financial side.
I see a lot of lists that look reasonable from an admissions standpoint but have not been thought through at all in terms of cost. A student might be a strong candidate at several schools on their list, but the likelihood of those schools being affordable varies quite a bit.
That usually does not become obvious until senior year, which is when families start comparing offers and realizing that some of the options they were counting on were never really going to line up financially.
At that point, the list is already set.
A balanced list should include schools where admission is likely and schools that are likely to be financially workable based on the student’s current profile. It should also include schools where stronger testing or a slightly different positioning could meaningfully change the outcome.
If you cannot explain where each school fits from both an admissions and a financial perspective, the list is not finished.
This is where timing matters.
By early June, I want students to have a solid framework in place. It does not need to be perfect, but it should be clear enough that everything else can build on it. Campus visits become more useful when you know what you are trying to evaluate. Testing decisions make more sense when you understand how a score might change your options. Essays are easier to write when you know where they are going.
When the list is still unsettled, all of those things feel harder than they need to.
If you have a current junior in Brookfield, Pewaukee, Oconomowoc, or the surrounding communities, this is a good time to take a step back and look at your list honestly.
Is it actually giving you options, or does it just feel like one because there are enough names on it?
If it is the second, that is fixable. It just needs to happen now, while there is still time to adjust before everything else picks up.
May 20, 2026
When should juniors build their college list? A Brookfield college counselor explains why Waukesha and Milwaukee area students often start too late and how to fix it.
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May 13, 2026
What should families discuss before summer in the college admissions process? A Brookfield college counselor shares 3 key conversations for Waukesha and Milwaukee area juniors.
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How much do AP exams really matter in college admissions? Learn what counts, what doesn’t, and what juniors should focus on after AP season to stay on track.
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