Anonymous wrote:What school? This sounds very out of order. When I interview, I'm given none of it. My first question is the one-minute version of the student's interests and activities. Sometimes the conversation touches on the other issues, but the interviewer doesn't have to know that. I do realize that the student is now in a very difficult position, so I would send back a brief note with the outlines, and after the interview, if there is any sense it went badly, I would have the student (not you) write a note to the admissions office. They probably would like to know.
If you post the school, someone here may have the contact information of the alumni rep or admissions coordinator for that school.
Another strategy is to have you son reach out to the admissions coordinator before the interview.
I conduct alumni interviews and am not provided with this information, nor do I ask. (But it is shocking what students do share)