Your Senior Year Guide

Built for SRHS ArtQuest — Class of 2027. Junior spring through decision day. Portfolio, applications, financial aid — in the order that actually matters right now.


Class of 2027 Junior Spring → Decision Day CA Student Focus

The timing is fine.

Applications for fall 2027 don't open until August. Your ArtQuest teachers know your work well enough to write letters that actually say something. This guide covers what to do between now and when decisions come in.

Right Now — Junior Spring

What to do before summer break

School List

Build your list — reach, match, and safety

  • Aim for 8–12 schools: 2–3 reaches, 4–5 matches, 2–3 safeties
  • For CA residents, UC and CSU schools are often "safeties" with exceptional programs
  • Browse the Digital Arts and Visual Fine Arts pages in this guide
  • Follow the Instagram accounts of schools you're interested in — get a feel for the culture
  • Look at student work, not just the brochure
Portfolio Audit

Take stock of what you have

  • Lay out (or scroll through) everything you've made in ArtQuest this year
  • Identify your 5–8 strongest pieces honestly — not your favorites, your strongest
  • Note what's missing: range of media, a piece that shows your process, a "hero" piece that shows your voice
  • Photograph anything that isn't already documented — good light, no shadows
  • Most programs want 10–20 works. You likely have more than you think.
Teacher Rec

Have a conversation with your ArtQuest teacher now

  • Let them know you're planning to apply to art schools — give them context
  • A recommendation from an ArtQuest teacher carries real weight at art school admissions offices
  • You don't need to formally ask yet — just open the conversation
Financial Picture

Have an honest conversation with your family

  • Know roughly what your family can contribute before you fall in love with a $70K/yr school
  • The Financial Aid section below explains how sticker price and actual cost differ significantly
  • CA in-state options (UC, CSU) are genuinely excellent and dramatically more affordable

Summer 2026 — Your Most Valuable Window

Unstructured time is portfolio time

Portfolio

Make 2–3 intentional new pieces

  • Don't try to make everything — make a few things with clear intention
  • Think about what's currently missing from your portfolio: range, depth, a different medium
  • Process matters — document your sketchbooks, studies, and work-in-progress
  • Many schools want to see how you think, not just finished work
Essays

Draft your artist statement and personal essay

  • Common App personal statement: 650 words. Start a rough draft — doesn't need to be good yet
  • Artist statement: 1–2 paragraphs on who you are as an artist and why this work matters to you
  • Write honestly. Admissions readers read thousands of these. The ones that stick are specific and real.
  • Your ArtQuest experience is specific and real. Use it.
Campus Visits

Visit in person if you can — or go virtual

  • Even one campus visit changes how you think about your list
  • CA schools (CalArts, Art Center, CCA, CSULB, UCLA, UCSD) are road-trip distance from Sonoma County
  • Virtual open houses happen year-round — most schools have them recorded on their site
FAFSA Prep

Get your tax documents organized

  • FAFSA opens October 1 — you want to file as early as possible
  • You'll need your family's prior-year tax information (2025 taxes for fall 2027 entry)
  • Many schools award aid on a first-come basis — early filing matters

Senior Fall — September through December 2026

Applications open. This is the window.

Aug–Sep

Get your accounts set up before school starts

  • Create your Common App account at commonapp.org (opens Aug 1)
  • Create your UC application account at apply.universityofcalifornia.edu
  • Formally ask your ArtQuest teacher for a recommendation — give them 4–6 weeks minimum
  • Finalize your school list. Most students apply to 10–15 schools.
Oct–Nov

UC filing window: October 1 – November 30

  • This is a hard window — UC applications are only accepted Oct 1 through Nov 30
  • Apply to every UC campus that has a relevant program — the application fee covers all of them
  • File FAFSA as early as October 1
  • Submit portfolio materials to schools with early deadlines (some Dec 1)
  • Finalize and photograph your complete portfolio
Dec–Jan

Most private art school deadlines fall here

  • RISD, CalArts, SAIC, Cooper Union, Parsons, Pratt, SVA — check each school's exact date
  • Submit CSS Profile for private school financial aid
  • Many schools use SlideRoom or Slideshow for portfolio submission — allow time to learn the platform
  • RISD has a drawing test — review their requirements specifically

Senior Spring — Decisions & Choosing Well

Getting in is one thing. Choosing right is another.

Feb–Mar

Decisions start arriving

  • Many schools notify in February and March
  • Financial aid award letters come with or shortly after acceptance — wait for both before deciding
  • Do not compare acceptance letters. Compare financial aid packages.
Apr–May

How to actually choose

  • Calculate your net cost: tuition + room & board − grants and scholarships (not loans)
  • A school that costs $20K/yr with debt vs. $8K/yr debt-free is a very different 4 years
  • If a school you love gave you less aid than expected, you can appeal — especially if you have a competing offer
  • Visit accepted students days if at all possible — the culture of a school matters enormously
  • National Decision Day is May 1. Take the time you need before then.

Portfolio Strategy

What art schools actually want to see

Most programs want 10–20 works. Quality over quantity — every single time. Your ArtQuest work is real portfolio material. Document it well and curate ruthlessly.

Curate, don't dump. 12 strong pieces beats 20 mediocre ones every time. If you're unsure about a piece, it probably doesn't belong.
Show range. Different media, scales, and subject matter shows you're a maker, not a one-trick specialist.
Include process. Sketchbooks, studies, and work-in-progress images are often more revealing than finished pieces. Many schools explicitly want them.
Have a "hero" piece. One work that shows your voice clearly — that stops a reader mid-scroll. Lead with it or end with it.
Photograph everything properly. Even great work looks weak in bad photos. Natural light, neutral background, no shadows.
RISD drawing test. If RISD is on your list, look up their drawing test requirements now — a geometric object plus a shoe. It's not hard but it's specific.
Your ArtQuest rec letter. A letter from your ArtQuest teacher that describes your actual practice — not just "a pleasure to teach" — is genuinely valuable. Give your teacher context about each school you're applying to.
Common portfolio mistakes to avoid:
  • Opening with your weakest piece
  • Including work you're not proud of just to hit a number
  • Submitting blurry or poorly lit photos
  • Ignoring program-specific requirements — some schools are very specific
  • Making everything the night before the deadline

Financial Aid Primer

Sticker price is rarely what you pay — here's how to navigate it

The tuition numbers in this guide look alarming. They should. But very few students pay sticker price — especially at private schools that want to attract talented students from families across the income spectrum. Here's how the money actually works.

FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid)

  • Submit at studentaid.gov as early as October 1
  • Uses your family's prior-year tax return
  • Determines eligibility for federal grants, loans, and work-study
  • Required by virtually every school — public and private
  • File early. Some aid is first-come, first-served.

CSS Profile

  • Required by most private art schools for institutional aid
  • More detailed than FAFSA — includes home equity, business assets, etc.
  • Submit through College Board at cssprofile.org
  • Each school charges a small fee to receive it (~$25)
  • Submit as soon as schools open their application portals

Cal Grant (CA Students Only)

  • Need-based grant exclusive to California residents
  • Can be worth $6,000–$15,000/yr depending on the school type
  • Requires FAFSA and a verified GPA submitted to the state
  • Make sure your high school submits your GPA to CSAC
  • Award amounts differ at UC, CSU, and private schools

Merit Scholarships

  • Many art schools offer talent-based scholarships alongside need-based aid
  • SCAD, MICA, and SAIC are known for generous merit awards
  • Some require a separate portfolio scholarship application
  • A strong portfolio is the single best scholarship application
  • Ask each school's financial aid office directly — it's always worth asking
On comparing offers: When aid letters arrive, calculate your net cost — tuition + room & board, minus grants and scholarships only (not loans). Loans are debt, not aid. A school that offers $20K in grants is very different from one that offers $20K in loans. If a school you love gave less than expected, it's completely reasonable to write a polite appeal letter — especially if you have a competing offer from a comparable school.

California Application Strategy

UC vs. CSU vs. Common App — and why it matters

UC System

  • Apply at apply.universityofcalifornia.edu — not Common App
  • Filing window: October 1 – November 30 — this is firm
  • One application covers all UC campuses you list
  • Art programs: UCLA, UCSD, UC Davis — each strong, different in character
  • In-state tuition is roughly $14K/yr. A serious bargain.

CSU System

  • Apply at CSUMentor.edu or the CSU application portal
  • Generally October through November, varies by campus
  • CSULB School of Art is NASAD-accredited, LA-adjacent, ~$7K/yr in-state
  • SJSU Design is strong for digital/design tracks, ~$7.6K/yr
  • CSUs are often overlooked — they shouldn't be

Common App

  • Used by most private art schools: RISD, CalArts, SAIC, Parsons, Pratt, SVA, MICA, SCAD, and more
  • One account, multiple applications — but each school has its own supplements
  • Opens August 1 — get your account set up over the summer
  • Art supplements and portfolio uploads are handled separately (often via SlideRoom)

School-Specific Portals

  • Some schools use their own applications: Art Center, Cooper Union
  • Cooper Union has a home test requirement — start researching early if it's on your list
  • Always check each school's admissions page directly for current requirements

Key Resources

Bookmarks worth keeping

Applications

Portfolio Platforms

  • SlideRoom — used by RISD, SAIC, and many others
  • Acceptd — used by some performing and visual arts programs
  • Most schools also accept direct PDF or web portfolio uploads — check each school

Financial Aid

  • csac.ca.gov — California Student Aid Commission (Cal Grant)
  • bigfuture.collegeboard.org — College Board financial aid tools
  • Each school's net price calculator — search "[school name] net price calculator"

Research