This is incorrect. - Harvard parent |
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No, the practice of asking alumni to volunteer time to run these interviews exists ONLY to keep the alumni engaged so that the alums feel involved in the school and give more money = the largest endowment in America. - Harvard alum. |
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So, parent of current Harvard student here.
Contrary to what people have said, not everyone gets an interview. Usually Harvard liked to interview kids they admit. Yale only interviews kids they have questions about — they admire kids without interviewing them. DC has reviewed admissions file and the interview was the deciding factor. The AOs had a question and if the interviewer addressed that in their answers, DC would move on to Committee. All of DC’s friends have seen their admissions file and have said the interview was extremely important. Harvard alumni interviewers love to ask about favorite books. I’m not sure why but everyone got that question. Some had long interviews and some had 30 minute ones. Length says nothing about admissions possibility. DC’s interview write-up (these are quite lengthy!) spoke about DC’s personality that came across during the interview. Really that was the same as what teachers/counselor had described. I guess they just wanted an alum to verify that before sending to committee. DC’s big leadership was a self-initiated community service project, but DC also had excellent stats. No research. Interdisciplinary interests. Good luck! |
Sorry for the typos. Yale admits (not admires) students without interviews. |
This might be true where you lived that only kids they were interested in were interviewed, but in my local area the alumni club has the goal of interviewing everyone who applies within our area. There are enough alumni volunteers to make it happen. |
Sad that you don’t realize just how much your report matters. My kid’s interviewer said none of his interviewees had ever been admitted. He was dejected. Said H had started emailing interviewers if their interviewees were admitted. DC was his first admit! I hope he realizes his interview was a HUGE factor in DCs admission. |
The interview is not a deciding factor, and in larger metro areas, they aim to interview everyone. |
The interviews are conducted by the local alumni clubs. In the bigger metro areas with active clubs, they do try to reach out to every applicant and offer to schedule an interview. DC is one of these areas. If there is no Harvard club where you live, or the club is less active and doesn’t have enough member volunteers, you might not get offered one. |
This is incorrect. Spouse has interviewed for Harvard for nearly two decades. They give everyone an interview unless the applicant lives somewhere with no local alumni. |
Same- but both schools offered my kid zoom only. One was because we were out of town the weekend they could do it in person. The other was the only time the interviewer had. |
From the mom’s tone, the son is doing H and P a big favor to attend their school! |
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I interview for a HYP and I always do virtual. It’s more efficient and also easier for me to take notes when I’m in front of my computer so I get my interview reports submitted more quickly. I assume most kids prefer not having to trek over to where I work. |
I think since Covid it doesn’t matter much where applicants live. they can always have an online interview, particularly if they're willing to be flexible about the time zone. I lived overseas for a few years and interviewed applicants from that country while I was there, and still get asked to interview for that country’s applicants even though I’m back in the USA. This year I interviewed SCEA applicants for a state that’s not near to where I live, because that state’s alumni coordinator reached out because they were lacking alumni interviewers for that state. In short, I do |