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Reply to "Student Reveals That Stanford Rescinded College Offer Months After Due To A ‘Lie’ On Her Application"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]She was left distraught after learning that a simple embellishment on her college application had cost her a place at Stanford. "This high schooler in the state of Washington just had their offer to Stanford rescinded for lying about the hour count on their extracurricular activity section," Brandon explained. He pointed out that while this may be good news for students on Stanford's waitlist who may now have an opportunity to attend the school due to someone's offer being rescinded, the student who this happened to was left upset by the entire ordeal. For a few of her different extracurriculars, a lot of the hours that she put down on the application were looked into thoroughly by the university back at the beginning of the year when they were initially reviewing her application. However, the school didn't get an answer from the people they'd contacted back when they first inquired. "A lot of her extracurriculars looked impressive, so it's not a surprise that Stanford still went ahead and offered her admission," Brandon continued. "But one of the activities that she had placed on her list was volunteering at a daycare for children with special needs. For that specific activity, she had to put that she had been working there 12 hours a week for 32 weeks per year. When Stanford contacted the daycare, they learned that the student was only a summer volunteer and did 12 weeks a year for 4 hours at a time. Once Stanford learned about the lie, they immediately revoked her application. The best way to avoid this kind of situation is to avoid lying or embellishing the truth on an activity section for a college application since there are easy ways for a school to verify that information, and once they verify it, then it becomes a huge mess. In a follow-up video, Brandon shared tips for students who are worried about colleges thinking they're lying about their extracurricular hour count. https://www.yourtango.com/self/stanford-rescinded-students-acceptance-lied-application[/quote] Good. Stop lying on applications. Parents: set a good example for your kids. [/quote] Or.. don't be specific in your EC section.. "Worked at local food banks - 10 hours a week; Web design work for a local nonprofit - 20 hrs a week during summer". Let Stanford verify that![/quote] The activity section of the Common App requires the following for each activity - Checkbox for grade level - Checkbox for Timing of participation (__During school year __During school break __All year) - Hours spent per week ___ - Weeks spent per year ___ If the story in OP is true (which I doubt), the student should simply have checked "During school break" and then correctly completed hours and weeks. [/quote] Looks like they tried to fixed this. I recall it used to jut have hours per week, which was hard to answer for something you don't do weekly. But it is still hard for something that you may do 1 hour one week and 30 in another week, etc. Somehow averaging doesn't feel quite right. I wish they just let you type in the answer without their formatting.[/quote] Maybe there should be a spot where you could indicate average hours and weeks spent per year/school year/break OR actual hours spent per week or per year. [/quote]
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