How to Choose the Right College for Your Child
Learn how your teen’s values, strengths, goals, and financial fit can guide smarter college choices and reduce unnecessary debt.
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Choosing a college can feel like one of the most expensive decisions your family will ever make.
Parents want to help their teen find the right path, but the process often starts in the wrong place.
Families ask:
– Which schools should we visit?
– What major should they choose?
– Where can they get scholarships?
– Is college in the U.S. worth the cost?
– Would studying abroad be smarter?
– What if they change their mind?
These are important questions.
But they are not the first questions.
Before choosing a college, students need to better understand themselves.
The best college planning does not start with a school list. It starts with the student.
This article was inspired by Shellee Howard’s conversation on the House of Peregrine Podcast, where she discussed how understanding a student’s core values, strengths, and future goals can help families make smarter college decisions, reduce wasted time, and avoid unnecessary debt.
College Fit Starts With Who Your Student Is
Many families begin college planning by looking at rankings, locations, sports teams, majors, or tuition costs.
Those details matter, but they are secondary.
The first question should be:
Who is this student becoming?
A strong college fit considers:
- values
- strengths
- learning style
- career interests
- maturity
- financial reality
- desired lifestyle
- long-term goals
A student who deeply values family may struggle at a school far from home.
A student who values adventure may thrive in a new city or even another country.
A student who wants medicine, law, engineering, or accounting may need a very specific academic path.
A student drawn to entrepreneurship or international business may have more flexible options.
The right path depends on the child, not just the college.


Why Core Values Matter in College Planning
Core values help students make better decisions because they clarify what actually matters.
Without that clarity, students often choose schools based on:
- prestige
- friends
- location
- pressure
- social media
- vague ideas about success
That can lead to expensive mismatches.
When students understand their values, they can ask better questions:
- Do I want independence or proximity to family?
- Do I prefer structure or flexibility?
- Do I want a collaborative or competitive environment?
- Do I want a career with stability, income, service, creativity, travel, or impact?
- What kind of life am I trying to build?
These questions help families move from guessing to planning.
Students Need Self-Awareness Before a College List
Many teens do not know how to describe themselves yet.
That does not mean they are behind.
It means they need guidance.
Parents can help by noticing patterns and reflecting them back:
- “You seem energized when you’re helping younger kids.”
- “You’re really good at organizing people.”
- “You light up when you talk about travel.”
- “You’re patient with details.”
- “You notice problems other people miss.”
These observations help students build language around their strengths.
That language matters later for essays, interviews, scholarship applications, major selection, and career planning.
The Right College May Not Be the Most Prestigious One
Prestige can be tempting.
But prestige alone is not a strategy.
The best-fit school is one where a student can grow academically, socially, emotionally, and financially.
A strong college choice should support:
- the student’s goals
- the family’s financial plan
- realistic career pathways
- mental and emotional well-being
- opportunities for growth
- long-term return on investment
A famous school that creates debt, stress, or a poor academic fit may not serve a student well.
A lesser-known school with strong support, generous scholarships, and the right program may be the wiser choice.


U.S. or International College? Start With the End Goal
For globally minded families, the college decision may include more than one country.
That can be exciting, but it adds complexity.
Families should consider:
- Does the student have the maturity to live far from home?
- Does the career require U.S.-based credentials?
- Will the degree transfer well across countries?
- What are the total costs?
- What testing or admissions requirements apply?
- Does the student have the maturity to live far from home?
For some students, studying abroad can be a strong fit.
For others, staying in the U.S. may be more practical, especially for careers with licensing or graduate school requirements.
The decision should come from strategy, not escape, fear, or guesswork.
Scholarships Are Stronger When Students Know Their Story
Scholarships are not only about grades.
They often reward students who can clearly show:
- who they are
- what they care about
- how they have taken the initiative
- how they have served or led
- why their goals matter
This is where core values become powerful.
A student who understands their story can apply for scholarships with more focus and authenticity.
They are not just saying, “Please give me money.”
They are showing alignment between their strengths, actions, goals, and future impact.
Extracurriculars Should Reflect Real Interests
Students do not need to do everything.
They need to do meaningful things.
Strong extracurriculars often show:
- leadership
- initiative
- consistency
- service
- creativity
- problem-solving
- genuine commitment
The activity itself matters less than what it reveals about the student.
A student interested in global issues might lead a service project. A student interested in business might start a small venture. A student interested in healthcare might serve in a community setting. A student interested in languages might use those skills in advocacy, tutoring, or cultural bridge-building.
The goal is not to impress colleges with busyness.
The goal is to help students become more fully themselves.


Early Clarity Can Reduce Wasted Time and Money
Changing majors is not a failure.
Exploration is part of growing up.
But avoidable confusion can become expensive.
When students enter college with no sense of direction, they may:
- take unnecessary classes
- switch majors repeatedly
- extend the time to graduation
- choose schools that do not offer their eventual major
- accumulate more debt
- lose confidence
Early self-awareness does not guarantee a straight path.
It does create a stronger starting point.
Want More Insight From the Podcast Conversation?
This article was inspired by Shellee Howard’s conversation on the House of Peregrine Podcast, where she discussed student core values, international college options, scholarships, college fit, and why families should start with the student before choosing a school.
The full conversation offers additional perspective on choosing between U.S. and international pathways, preparing students for admissions, and helping teens build a future aligned with who they are.
The Best College Path Starts With Your Student
Your child does not need to have everything figured out today.
They do need time, guidance, and honest conversations.
The right college path begins when students understand who they are, what matters to them, and what kind of future they want to build.
That clarity can help families choose better-fit schools, reduce unnecessary debt, strengthen scholarship opportunities, and avoid decisions based only on fear or prestige.
If your family wants help identifying your student’s values, strengths, career direction, scholarship opportunities, or best-fit college options, College Ready can help you create a thoughtful plan rooted in clarity, confidence, and long-term success.


About the Author
Shellee Howard
Founder & College Planning Strategist
Shellee helps families navigate the college admission and financing process with clarity and confidence.

