Anonymous wrote:I went to a big three in the nineties and they discouraged us from using the common app. Said it didn’t show enough interest in the school and would hurt our application chances.
I spent so much time perfectly typing each application. I practiced on xerox copies first for each one and then retyped on the original app.
Anonymous wrote:My DS filled it out over the summer. I was surprised that you had to fill out essentially the same questions over and over again. There should be check boxes for duplicate questions like "Which application plan do you intend to use? Early decision, early action, regular decision, etc"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again, OK I see Common App started in 1975? Well, I had no idea, and I applied to colleges in 1985 but never heard of it back then.
Maybe when they switched to all online applications (in 2013) was when the number of applications per student started to skyrocket? Which had led to colleges requesting a ton of supplemental information to screen out students who aren't really interested?
NP here
I applied to college in the fall of 92 (graduated HS in '93) and I had never heard of the common app either. Everyone I knew back then applied to 3-7 colleges. I think the 12+ colleges that students today apply to is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:I used the Common App in 1987. It wasn't that significant really, since everything was on paper, so you still had to fill out separate apps and mail them to each school. The "common" part was that they were all formatted the same way, so once you did the first one, you knew the drill. Other non-common app schools had designed their own applications, so they required a little more effort to complete.
Anonymous wrote:OP again, OK I see Common App started in 1975? Well, I had no idea, and I applied to colleges in 1985 but never heard of it back then.
Maybe when they switched to all online applications (in 2013) was when the number of applications per student started to skyrocket? Which had led to colleges requesting a ton of supplemental information to screen out students who aren't really interested?