AI Powered College Planning Tool

See how Waystone builds a student path

Waystone builds a college strategy around a student’s profile and goals. Have a career in mind? The assessment works backward from that destination. Still exploring? It maps degree programs or college options based on where you are today.

Four inputs. One strategy.

Waystone analyzes a student profile and meets your student where they are — courses, schools, activities, and cost.

01

Build a Profile

Enter GPA, test scores, coursework, activities, and career target (all inputs are optional). All info feeds directly into the scoring engine.

02

Activities Get Scored

Activities and academics scored to emulate the way an admissions officer would see it, using data from over 300 real college data sets. Read more about our methodology

03

Schools Are Matched

Select up to 5 colleges or we can recommend matches for based on the student profile and preferences.

04

You Get a Plan

Gaps and recommended actions are ranked by possible admissions impact.

Note: It is impossible to predict an enrollment outcome. This analysis is for informational and planning purposes only. It is not a prediction of admissions outcomes. College admissions decisions depend on many factors outside this tool’s scope.

⬡  Sample Assessment Report

Alex: Dentist

A real Waystone output for a 10th-grade profile targeting a dentist career. All 10 sections are shown as they appear in the application.

Alex
Grade 10
Dentist
Biology & Biomedical Sciences
3.8
Unweighted GPA
PSAT 1150 (~SAT 1235)
SAT Score
MA
Residence → Target States
Top Activity
9.0 / 10
Eagle Scout
Highest-Aligned Course
7.5 / 10
AP Physics 1
Athletic Profile
4+ yrs
Varsity basketball + 4-year club lacrosse
Field Exposure
0
no field exposure — no shadowing, clinical volunteering, or dental-adjacent activity documented
Program Tier
Mid-Major Regional
With two years remaining and a 3.8 GPA, Alex has a realistic path to competitive regional and mid-tier state universities, but elite pre-dental programs will require a materially stronger transcript and field exposure before senior year.
SAT Percentile
No SAT on file
01

OVERALL PROFILE STRENGTH

Alex is a 10th grader with a genuinely strong foundation in two areas — athletics and character credentials — but the profile has a significant structural problem: nothing in it points toward dentistry. Eagle Scout is exceptional and will stop an admissions reader cold; four years of sports including two at the varsity level demonstrate sustained commitment and competitive grit. Those are real assets. But a student aiming for a pre-dental or biology-focused undergraduate track needs clinical exposure, science rigor, and at least one field-adjacent credential before junior year applications begin in earnest, and Alex currently has none of those.

The academic trajectory is functional but not impressive for a dental school feeder path. A 3.8 GPA is solid, and the planned AP coursework in junior year adds needed rigor, but the absence of AP Biology, AP Chemistry, or any life science beyond freshman Biology is a gap that will be noticed by competitive pre-health programs. The projected SAT midpoint of 1235 sits below the median at most selective schools and squarely at the lower edge of University of Tampa’s admit range. Two years remain to correct every gap identified here — the timeline is tight but workable if action starts now.

02

SCORE SUMMARY TABLE

03

TOP STRENGTHS

Eagle Scout (2026): Fewer than 0.2% of all male high school students earn this rank. It is externally verified by BSA national records and signals sustained commitment, leadership, and follow-through over years — qualities every selective admissions office values. This is the single most differentiating item in Alex’s profile.
Varsity Basketball + 4 Years of Club Lacrosse: Two sustained athletic commitments across all four years of high school is meaningful. Varsity basketball demonstrates competitive selection. Four years of club lacrosse alongside it shows that Alex is not a single-sport participant — this combination signals discipline, time management, and competitive drive.
Engineering Design + Physics Arc: The pairing of Honors Introduction to Engineering Design in 10th grade with AP Physics 1 in 11th creates a credible early STEM signal. If Alex declares an engineering or technical major, this sequence becomes a legitimate narrative foundation.
Math Progression: Algebra 1 → Algebra 2/Trig → Precalculus → Calculus is a clean, upward trajectory. Calculus in senior year is a meaningful signal for any quantitative program. Paired with AP Physics, it suggests readiness for technical college coursework.
04

GAP CLOSURE PLAN

05

COURSE RIGOR ASSESSMENT

06

SCHOOL MATCH PROFILE

Alex identified only one school. Given the profile, the ideal spread requires one reach, three good fits, and one safety. Four additional schools are recommended below to complete that structure, all selected for pre-dental or biology program strength and academic fit with Alex’s current numbers.

Northeastern University
ADMISSIONS FIT: Northeastern’s acceptance rate has fallen below 7%, with a middle 50% SAT range of approximately 1490–1570. Alex’s projected 1235 SAT and current course rigor fall significantly below the threshold. This is a genuine reach — not a misfire, but an aspirational target that requires material score and transcript improvement over the next two years to be competitive. Northeastern is in Massachusetts, making it an in-state option; the acceptance rate for Massachusetts residents does not carry a substantial preference advantage at this school. If Alex achieves a 1380+ SAT and adds AP Biology with a strong grade, the application becomes worth submitting.

ACTIVITY ALIGNMENT: Eagle Scout is exactly the kind of credential Northeastern’s admissions readers recognize. The university places explicit weight on co-op experience and professional preparation — Alex’s lack of field exposure is the narrative gap that most undermines the Northeastern application.

ACADEMIC ALIGNMENT: Northeastern expects 8 to 12 AP or Honors courses for competitive applicants. Alex’s planned 4 to 5 places the profile materially below that ceiling. The planned AP Physics 1 and AP US History are relevant, but the transcript would need AP Biology and ideally AP Chemistry to approach competitive standing.

PROGRAM & CAREER FIT: Northeastern offers a Health Science B.S. and a Biology B.S. with pre-dental advising built into the curriculum. Its co-op program means pre-dental students can complete clinical rotations and research placements as part of the degree — a genuine differentiator for dental school applicants. This is the strongest program fit for Alex’s career target among schools in the Northeast.
The University of Tampa
ADMISSIONS FIT: University of Tampa’s acceptance rate is 40.3%, and its ACT midpoint of 26 corresponds to approximately an SAT range of 1200–1260. Alex’s projected SAT midpoint of 1235 places the profile at the lower edge of the competitive band — admitted, but without distinction on test scores alone. The 3.8 unweighted GPA is comfortably above the typical admit profile. Tampa is a private nonprofit in Florida, so there is no in-state versus out-of-state rate differential — all students pay the same $34,408 tuition. With 57.7% of enrolled students identifying as women, Alex’s male profile is not underrepresented but is not a demographic leverage point either. Alex should review Tampa’s Common Data Set for any additional demographic detail.

ACTIVITY ALIGNMENT: Eagle Scout is an uncommon credential in a Florida private university applicant pool and will register as distinctive. The athletic record adds breadth, but the absence of any pre-dental field exposure is a weakness Tampa’s pre-health advising office will notice.

ACADEMIC ALIGNMENT: Honors Chemistry and the planned AP Physics 1 are the courses that most directly demonstrate academic readiness for Tampa’s biology or pre-dental track. The overall AP count is within Tampa’s admit range, but the lack of AP Biology remains a specific subject-area gap that Tampa’s pre-health advisors will see. Alex’s GPA places them above the center of Tampa’s admit range academically.

PROGRAM & CAREER FIT: University of Tampa offers a Biology B.S. with a pre-health concentration, which is the standard undergraduate pathway for dental school applicants. Tampa has a Health Professions Advising office with established pipelines to Florida’s dental schools, including the University of Florida College of Dentistry and Nova Southeastern. The 63.7% graduation rate and 85.5% retention rate are adequate, and the Tampa metro area offers clinical volunteering and shadowing access that Alex would need to build.
University of New England
ADMISSIONS FIT: UNE’s acceptance rate is approximately 80%, with a middle 50% SAT range of roughly 1050–1230. Alex’s projected 1235 SAT sits at the top of that range, and a 3.8 GPA is comfortably above the typical admit profile — making this a realistic good fit. UNE is a private school in Maine, so NEBHE Tuition Break eligibility may apply if Alex’s intended major is unavailable at a Massachusetts public institution; Alex should verify this with UNE’s financial aid office.

ACTIVITY ALIGNMENT: UNE’s health-focused campus culture means Eagle Scout and multi-sport athletic commitment are valued signals of character and follow-through — both are genuine assets in this pool.

ACADEMIC ALIGNMENT: Alex’s Honors Chemistry and planned AP Physics are above the typical UNE admit profile. The transcript is a strength here, not a liability.

PROGRAM & CAREER FIT: UNE is one of the few undergraduate institutions in the Northeast with a direct pipeline to a dental school — it operates its own College of Dental Medicine. Its pre-dental advising is among the most structured in New England, and students who complete the biology pre-dental track have documented placement rates into dental school. For a student whose goal is dental school admission, UNE deserves serious consideration as a program-fit school, not just a safety.
University of Florida
ADMISSIONS FIT: UF’s acceptance rate is approximately 24%, with a middle 50% SAT range of 1340–1500. Alex’s projected 1235 is below the lower bound of that range, making this a lower-end good fit with current numbers. However, UF is an out-of-state school for Alex, and Florida’s flagship has a substantially lower out-of-state acceptance rate — realistically making this a soft reach unless SAT scores improve. With a 1300+ SAT and AP Biology added to the transcript, this becomes a legitimate application.

ACTIVITY ALIGNMENT: UF’s pre-health advising is tied to the Florida Gators culture of competitive academic preparation. Eagle Scout and varsity athletics are both assets in this pool. Clinical exposure will be expected and its absence noticed.

ACADEMIC ALIGNMENT: UF expects a rigorous science sequence. AP Biology and AP Chemistry are the most common AP courses among admitted pre-dental applicants. Alex’s planned trajectory covers Physics and History but misses both of those — a gap UF’s pre-health program reviewers will see.

PROGRAM & CAREER FIT: UF offers a Biology B.S. with direct articulation advising toward UF’s own College of Dentistry, one of the top dental programs in the Southeast. The proximity of the undergraduate college and the dental school — both on the Gainesville campus — creates an advising pipeline that is difficult to replicate elsewhere. For a student targeting dentistry, this program fit is exceptional.
University of Massachusetts Amherst
ADMISSIONS FIT: UMass Amherst’s acceptance rate is approximately 64%, with a middle 50% SAT range of roughly 1220–1430. Alex’s projected 1235 sits at the lower end of that range, and a 3.8 GPA is a genuine asset in the UMass pool — this is a solid safety with a realistic path to merit scholarship consideration. As a Massachusetts resident, Alex qualifies for in-state tuition, making this one of the lowest-cost options in the profile. UMass Amherst is the flagship public university in Alex’s home state and the strongest in-state option for pre-health pathways.

ACTIVITY ALIGNMENT: Eagle Scout, varsity basketball, and multi-year lacrosse are all above-average signals for UMass Amherst’s admit pool. The absence of clinical exposure is still a weakness, but it is less penalizing at a school where pre-health advising begins in earnest after enrollment.

ACADEMIC ALIGNMENT: Alex’s planned AP coursework and 3.8 GPA are well-positioned for UMass Amherst’s admit profile. The science sequence gap — no AP Biology — is worth addressing before application, but it does not disqualify the application at this selectivity level.

PROGRAM & CAREER FIT: UMass Amherst offers a Biology B.S. and a Biochemistry B.S., both of which are standard pre-dental pathways. The Commonwealth Honors College is an option Alex should evaluate — honors designation adds academic distinction to the transcript and strengthens dental school applications downstream.
07

IN-STATE TUITION STRATEGY

Alex is a Massachusetts resident, which means UMass Amherst is the strongest in-state public option for a pre-dental biology track — it offers full pre-health advising, a rigorous Biology and Biochemistry curriculum, and in-state tuition that is substantially below any private school in this profile. Massachusetts is also a member of the New England Board of Higher Education Tuition Break program, which caps tuition at 175% of in-state rates at member public institutions across Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont for programs not offered at Massachusetts public schools — Alex should verify with each out-of-state school whether the pre-dental biology program qualifies for this discount.

The single most actionable cost step for Alex is to file the FAFSA as early as possible in the fall of senior year — the Massachusetts priority deadline for state grant programs is May 1, but earlier submission materially improves aid award outcomes, and merit-based scholarships at schools like University of Tampa and University of New England have earlier institutional deadlines that coincide with Early Action. Improving the SAT score above 1300 before senior year applications opens merit scholarship eligibility at several schools in this profile, including University of Tampa, where academic merit awards are tied to GPA and test score thresholds.

SchoolIn-State TuitionOut-of-State TuitionAvg Net PriceNotes
University of Tampa$34,408$34,408~$27,000Private; no in/out distinction; merit aid available
Northeastern University$63,144$63,144~$40,000Private; in-state status irrelevant; significant merit aid at threshold scores
University of New England$38,220$38,220~$29,000Private; NEBHE eligibility may apply — verify with financial aid
University of Florida$6,381$28,658~$14,000Public FL; out-of-state rate applies to Alex; strong value if admitted
UMass Amherst$16,952$37,718~$22,000Public MA; in-state rate applies; strongest cost-value in profile
08

CAREER AND DEGREE ALIGNMENT

The strongest undergraduate path for a student targeting dental school is a Biology B.S. with a pre-health or pre-dental concentration — this degree directly satisfies the prerequisite coursework dental schools require (general biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry, physics, and statistics) and provides the GPA foundation that DAT scores are evaluated against. A concentration in Biochemistry strengthens both the application narrative and the underlying science fluency dental school curricula demand. A minor in Psychology is the single highest-leverage addition: dental schools increasingly weight behavioral science preparation, and psychology is among the most commonly recommended secondary fields for DAT-ready students.

The most direct gap between Alex’s current profile and dental school entry requirements is the absence of any documented patient contact or clinical hours. Every U.S. dental school requires verified shadowing hours — most set a minimum of 40 to 100 hours with a licensed dentist — and Alex currently has zero. Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry are also prerequisite courses not yet visible in the planned high school trajectory, which means the undergraduate course selection must be deliberate from day one. The strongest secondary specialization to build toward now is human anatomy and physiology, available at many community colleges as dual enrollment: this course signals biological depth, satisfies a common pre-dental prerequisite early, and demonstrates the kind of proactive academic planning that dental school admissions committees look for in undergraduate applicants.

09

AI IMPACT

10

THREE PERSONAL STATEMENT ANGLES

01The Knot You Don’t Untie
Angle: The skills that make someone excellent at scouting — patience with process, tolerance for setbacks that have no single cause, the ability to hold a long project together when no external deadline enforces it — are exactly the skills that separate dental students who finish from those who don’t, and most people never notice the connection until they are already in the chair.
Open in the middle of the Eagle Scout service project — not at the beginning when the idea was clean, but at the specific moment when something went wrong that wasn’t anyone’s fault. A delivery didn’t arrive. A volunteer didn’t show. A measurement was off. Name the physical reality: the weight of lumber sitting unused, the silence of a job site that should be loud, the exact number of days left in the window. The insight that lives here, unfelt but present, is that the project does not care about your intentions — only your adjustments.
Reveals: This essay demonstrates that Alex understands the difference between commitment and performance — that the visible result is produced by invisible preparation — and it does so through a genuine long-term credential, not a constructed anecdote.
Eagle Scout essays almost always describe the project itself; this one argues something true about preparation that the credential earns the student the right to say.
The Trap: Describing the Eagle Scout project as a story of obstacles overcome and lessons learned — the version where every setback has a tidy resolution and the whole thing adds up to “I learned perseverance.” That version is forgettable.
02The Ball Moves Before You Do
Angle: Varsity basketball and four years of lacrosse teach a student something that no classroom can: that precision in a high-pressure moment is not the result of thinking faster — it is the result of having already resolved the decision before the pressure arrived. That principle, applied to a future in dentistry, is not metaphorical. It is operational.
Place the reader at a specific varsity game moment — not a winning shot, but the moment before it: the read, the recognition, the half-second when the player knows what the situation requires before the situation has fully announced itself. Name the physical specifics: the court, the position, the distance, the noise level, the opponent. The insight embedded here is that the decision was made in practice, not in the moment — and the moment only reveals what the preparation built.
Reveals: Alex is not describing sports participation. Alex is describing a learning process that has produced a specific kind of readiness — and doing so through two independent sets of evidence, which makes the claim credible rather than convenient.
Most athlete essays are about teamwork or resilience; this one makes a precise claim about the neurological logic of preparation, which is both more interesting and more relevant to a health sciences application.
The Trap: Framing this as “sports taught me to work hard and never give up” — the version that uses athletics as a generic character metaphor instead of as a specific training ground for a specific capacity.
03The Merit Badge Nobody Lists
Angle: The most important thing Eagle Scout builds is not the project, the badges, or even the leadership experience — it is the ability to be accountable to a standard that nobody is enforcing in the room with you, which turns out to be the only standard that matters in any field where the stakes are held by someone else.
Open with the specific, private moment in scouting when it would have been easier — genuinely easier, with no external consequence — to do the thing imprecisely. Maybe a knot tied when no one was watching. Maybe a service hour logged at 59 minutes. Maybe a merit badge requirement completed at 90% when 100% was technically unverifiable. Name the exact moment, the exact choice, and the exact small cost of doing it right anyway. The insight living here is that integrity is not dramatic — it is granular and quiet and most often happens when nothing is at stake except the standard itself.
Reveals: This essay doesn’t say “I want to be a dentist because I care about people.” It demonstrates the interior condition that makes a trustworthy clinician, through evidence that is both unusual and credibly documented.
The claim is counterintuitive — the most valuable thing about Eagle Scout is not visible on the badge — and it connects directly to the ethical core of clinical practice in a way that is earned rather than asserted.
The Trap: Making this into a motivational story about character development or a list of all the things scouting involved. The power of this essay lives in specificity and restraint — the moment has to be small, private, and exactly right.