Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Top 5 College Application Mistakes to Avoid
Top 5 College Application Mistakes to Avoid With the majority of collegeà application deadlines just days away, itââ¬â¢s important to perform a thorough review of your applications to help avoid making obvious mistakes that can negatively impact your chances for admission. When youââ¬â¢re done with that, do it again and then have a second and third set of eyes do the same. Serious colleges want serious applicants, and a short-sighted error can spell disasterà for your admission prospects. Below is College Transitionsââ¬â¢ list of top 5 college application mistakes that we frequently see applicants make.1. TyposLetââ¬â¢s start with the most obvious mistakeââ¬âthe dreaded typo. In life, they happen. Autocorrected texts can turn your ââ¬Å"dear friendâ⬠into your ââ¬Å"dead friendâ⬠and bad grammar can mean the difference between knowing your crap and knowing youââ¬â¢re crap.Reread your application, then reread it again, then ask everyone you know to read it. Because when it comes to grammar or dandruff in your 1980s perm, you never get a second chance to make a first impression.2. Be professionalOkay, we know that your Partystud1@hotmail.com account has served you well ever since 8th grade. While others in your social group traded in their hotmail accounts for gmail eons ago, youââ¬â¢ve held steady. Youââ¬â¢re not partystud 2, 34, or 79ââ¬âyouââ¬â¢re partystud1. We encourage you to keep your goofy/offensive/nonsensical email accounts and use them without shameâ⬠¦except when you are emailing prospective colleges.Your best bet is to open a new account that is as close to your legal name as possible: FirstName.LastName@whatever.com. If your name is Mike Jones you might have to add a 6 digit number after your name but thatââ¬â¢s okay. And donââ¬â¢t worry, partystud1 may have to lie dormant for a few months, but heââ¬â¢ll entertain himselfââ¬âheââ¬â¢s partystud1!3. Beating a dead horseOf course, weââ¬â¢re using a clichà © here and not refer ring to the actual postmortem equine abuse (tip: that wouldnââ¬â¢t look good on an app either). Admissions officers do not like to read the same thing over and over. In other words, donââ¬â¢t weave the same tale of overcoming adversity through field hockey into every essay topic.Real estate on an application is as valuable as Park Place. Donââ¬â¢t treat it like Baltic or Mediterranean Avenue (even if hotels are cheaper to build and itââ¬â¢s all part of your grand plan to be a Monopoly slumlord). Use every open space on an application to reveal something new and important about who you are. Thatââ¬â¢s what itââ¬â¢s there for.4. The never-ending activity pageââ¬Å"Oh, you organized a potato sack race at your family reunion when you were ten? Welcome to Stanford, young man!â⬠says the man in the tweed jacket as he hands a teenage boy a celebratory cigar.Perhaps this absurd, never-gonna-happen scenario is the fantasy driving applicants who submit activity pages a nd resumes longer than that of the average head of state. Keep your resumes/activity pages short but sweet, which also happens to be the title of a delightful episode of Different Strokes where Arnold Drummond searches for love. Colleges know that no matter how accomplished an 18-year-old you may be, youââ¬â¢re still a teenager. The great majority of your resume-worthy achievements lie ahead.5. Keep mom and dad on a leashSpeak to any group of college admissions officials and tales of overly-involved parents abound and make no mistake, excessive parental intervention can harm your admissions chances. E-mails and phone calls to the admissions office should come exclusively from you, the applicant, not your parents. Your application should not show any traces of mom or dadââ¬â¢s handwriting or middle-aged writing styles.For a further explanation of an appropriate role for parents in the admissions process, revisit our previous blog on the subject.
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