The Admissions Diary: Simplifying The College Application

Wednesday, 14 October 2009 00:02 by Lena

ImageThis week, high school blogger Olivia Duell discusses how she uses the Common Application to save time and simplify the complicated process of applying to college.

Back in August, I made a list of all the colleges I definitely wanted to apply to. Staring at the names on paper, it hit me how fast all the deadlines were approaching and how in under a year, I’d hopefully be heading off to one of these universities. Then I became very nervous; thinking about all I had to complete made me worry about missing the deadlines and I got the urge to fill out all my applications RIGHT THAT INSTANT. I do realize that it was August, that I wasn’t applying to any college for early decision, and that I was crazy. But I still felt the need to get a head start, so I ventured onto the internet and began checking out all of the colleges’ websites.

First, I headed over to the admissions page at NYU. Let me just say there was a ton of information, and at the same time I couldn’t seem to find the answers to the specific questions I had. The same was true when I headed to Drexel, then to Temple, and finally, grew frustrated. I was applying to seven colleges, and I didn’t want to hunt through seven different admissions web pages. What I did notice was that most of the colleges recommended applying via the Common App, so I checked out the website just to see if this was an option that would work for me. Fortunately, the information that the Common App provided was a bit more organized. After signing up with a user account, the site basically told you all you needed to know.  It listed what colleges accept the Common App, allowing you to keep track of the ones you wanted to apply to on your user profile. Luckily for me, six out of my seven choices were affiliated with the Common App (Temple has their own system) and I realized this would greatly help my application process.

It’s pretty easy to get started and fill out your general information: address, parent info, activities (you can even upload a document if you’d like to add a brag sheet), etc. It’s all pretty self-explanatory to the extent that you’re alerted if you leave a section blank. It does get a bit confusing at times; the test section, for instance, allows you to record standardized test scores, but you still have to send in the official scores from the College Board and from ACT. Guidance counselors and teachers also need to be invited online in order to fill out recommendations; because not all teachers are familiar with the Common App, it’s probably best to make them aware the invitation is coming.

The biggest pain is the college-specific supplements. Each college tags on their own supplement that needs to be filled out along with the regular application.  Often, this requires more writing work explaining why so-and-so college is the right choice. Yet, if the college doesn’t require this kind of essay in its supplement, it’s likely you’ll be forced to create “alternate” applications (once you submit your first application to one school, you can tweak it before you send it to other schools). In this case, you make your Common App personal essay college specific, because you aren’t allowed this opportunity in the supplement. It gets really confusing, and you need to keep track of which personal essay to send to each college depending on their supplements. I was forced to make yet another hand-written list.

Over all, though, the Common App is pretty solid. It’s helped me get organized, it breaks the application down for me, and it even tells me my due dates. Plus, a ton of colleges accept the Common App and consider it equally to their own custom applications. It’s easy, efficient, and I recommend it to anyone going through the college application process.

For more stories from students themselves, check out the archives for previous columns in The Admissions Diary.

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Comments

November 25. 2009 04:45

Hey there Olivia!

I can see why the Common App is such a helpful, not to mention handy, tool when it comes to applying to college. You can apply to several schools as long as they accept the Common App. Fortunately for me, all of the colleges that I applied to didn't "necessarily require" the Common App and therefore, I could escape it. I applied to three colleges: Rice University, my dream school, Southern Methodist University (SMU), and my backup (safety school that I have no doubt of getting admitted) University of Texas at Arlington (UTA). As you might have noticed, I applied to Texas based schools only. That's because I live in Texas and I didn't really want to leave the state, despite the amazing variety of outstanding colleges outside where I live. I would have loved to apply to California based schools like UC Berkely or USC though or even New York! Anyway, the reasons while I didn't use the Common App are as follows: Rice University technically requires the Common App for freshman/transfer admission but there is this program called Questbridge that Rice participates in and as such, I decided to apply via this method. Its for applicants who come from low income family (a total family income of at most $60,000 is the norm) yet are high achieving students (top 10% or better). For SMU, I was lucky enough to find that they accept both the Common App, which I didn't want to complete because of its length, and a personal application that was no longer than 5 pages! Rice and SMU are both private schools but UTA is not so in Texas, public colleges usually require a different type of application: ApplyTexas. Its similar to the Common App but it isn't as long and essays aren't always required. So as you can see, I escaped from the grips of the Common App and didn't have to complete it. This information was still useful though and I have a younger sister who might benefit from it when she applies to college--in 2-3 years.

Thanks Olivia!

PS: I'm crossing my fingers I get accepted to Rice University. Go Owls!!

Victor

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