How to Get Admissions Officers to Say Yes
From essays to interviews to teacher recs, make sure your authentic voice comes through—loudly and persuasively
Selling yourself to a college is easy. You just have to convince the admissions committee that you're one in 2.5 million.
That's the number of applicants that four-year schools will be sifting through this year. So let go of the notion that the fat envelope would already be in the mail if you could just crack the admissions code. "It would be a lot easier if there was a magic formula," says David duKor-Jackson, associate dean of admissions at Bucknell University, "but there isn't." There's no magic essay topic, either. Says Annalee Nissenholtz, college counselor at Ladue Horton Watkins High School in St. Louis: "If I hear about one more kid who's saving the poor...! The first kid or two who did it—they were really interesting, and then everyone heard that must be the trick. There really is no trick. It's digging deep and trying to figure out what makes you interesting."
That's good news. Instead of trying to decipher what they want, your task is to tell your story—to convey, in today's college app watchwords, a sense of your passion and commitment. Colleges are trying to understand something: "Who is this person, and why would we want him or her to join this community?" says Jennifer Delahunty, dean of admissions and financial aid at Kenyon College. Use each part of the process to accentuate your positives and show how you will contribute to the greater good. "We no longer are just looking to pick up students," says Jed Liston, assistant vice president of enrollment services at the University of Montana-Missoula. "We're looking for citizens."
Making the grade. The first thing colleges look at is your high school transcript. "If you're not in the ballpark, extracurriculars aren't going to get you in," says Jim Jump, academic dean and director of guidance at St. Christopher's School in Richmond, Va.—"unless you've won the Nobel Prize or have your own sitcom." But beyond the A's, B's, and C's, admissions staffs like to see academic risk takers. "Students ask us, 'Is it better to get an A in a regular class or a B in an AP class?' " says Keith Gramling, director of undergraduate admissions at Loyola University New Orleans. "Well, it's better to get an A in an AP class. But we are looking for students who have challenged themselves."
Still, piling on classes to impress your dream college can backfire. "Oftentimes I find myself trying to talk students off the AP ledge," says Rick Bischoff, director of admissions at California Institute of Technology. "I see students who are doing all they can to keep up with the work and don't have time to keep up with the learning. We're not counting APs. Has this student taken a rigorous curriculum? Has it prepared them?...It's that engagement that's central." Adds Stephen Farmer, assistant provost and director of undergraduate admissions of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill: "What we want for students is the feeling that everyone is looking for the next great thing they need to know. We like to see a sense of joy and curiosity."
Express yourself. If the goal is helping colleges picture who you are, the essay, as one longtime admissions officer says is, "the peek through the curtain." Applicants often assume that the peek should reveal not a subtle landscape but a dramatic perspective. "Students feel, 'I need to find that exotic thing that sells,' " says Tony Cabasco, dean of admission and financial aid at Whitman College. In truth, he says, what you write about "doesn't have to be a week in Africa. It can be you were a clerk at Safeway for the summer and that changed the way you view race relations or the environment." Adds Ted O'Neill, dean of admissions at the University of Chicago, "Turning points in their lives are kind of premature for kids of this age." Delahunty's idea of a "truly exceptional essay" at Kenyon: one in which "a student travels in a few swift paragraphs from one perspective to another and has seen the deeper meaning, learned the lesson, or found the humor."
"We're looking for a thoughtful, earnest presentation that shows complicated interests and thinking," says O'Neill. This can be achieved in stories reflecting on life's smaller slices—why you like helping your dad fix up old cars on the weekend, being the only boy in a family of seven girls, why you like to write birthday limericks. Liston at Montana-Missoula recalls reading one student's answer to the question "What was the most significant invention of all time?" It was "a very elegant essay on the spork," he says. "You left saying, 'That was quirky, that was funny, but that was well thought out.' "
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Reader Comments
mexicen language
firsts i am Somalia and i life in Uganda I'm student i a study in public administration at KIU KAMPALA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY
Keep it real
I work in an honors program at a university, and we review applications just as an admissions office does. I can say from personal experience that we do have pretty good BS detectors. So be real with who you are so we can realistically evaluate whether our school/ program is a good fit for you. Yes, getting the "unfortunately, I regret to inform you..." letter sucks for a while, but going to a school where you won't fit in or be happy is infinitely worse. We get applications from students who extol the virtues of our school's mission and characteristics, but if your resume and courses don't match up, then it's not going to be a good fit. The student and parents then end up losing time and money, not to mention the emotional distress of a student being very unhappy at a specific school. The institution loses because we offered a seat to student X who won't be happy and will transfer when student Y who was next on the list would have been a great fit at the institution.
So the first step is for students and parents to first be realistic about what the student needs/ wants. Don't apply to and go to a school just because of the name or because mom and dad want you to go there. Make sure that the core values of the institution match what you really believe. And make sure that the school has lots of options for majors and programs of study; most students change their major at least once during college, many more than once. The change can also be really radical; I myself changed from a biology pre-med to an education major. Imagine my dilemma if the school I attended only had science majors... I'd have been in serious trouble!
I know this is hard for a 17 year old to do, but it's important. I'd say, in my own humble opinion, that it's the most important thing. Be honest with yourself and with your parents. If the thought of law, medical, etc. school fills you with dread rather than joyful anticipation, then that's likely not a good fit for you. It's about finding a good fit. Name branding can be important, but it's definitely not the most important. Those who read and evaluate applications aren't looking to be mean and reject students for no reason. We really are trying to make sure that there's a good fit between the student and the school/ program.
Good luck to all those applying!
Essay writing and college prep
Thank you for this article; it lists exactly the sort of advice I'd like my daughter to hear from the very experts who will be reading her essays. I hope that these opinions represent those at most universities, assuming that the student has met the preliminary hurdle of academic requirements.
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