You're not getting away with one mistake about your vs you're. The panelists sounded serious about tossing your application. The you vs you're is a pet peeve for a lot of people, like nails on a blackboard.Anonymous wrote:OP - this must be your first child but this is not new. it's been around for many years. the point is to make sure kids take the essays seriously enough to check and double check... you can probably get by with one mistake but two would be one too many.
DCUM is full or 'your' and you're' by adults, I assume.Anonymous wrote:If you don't know the difference between "your" and "you're" by 11th or 12th grade, you probably shouldn't bother applying to college.
Anonymous wrote:This was true when I applied to colleges - it was drilled into all of us senior year. Of course in those days a typo meant an actual typing mistake on the typewriter.
+1If you don't know the difference between "your" and "you're" by 11th or 12th grade, you probably shouldn't bother applying to college.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if leniency is given to essays where English is not the primary language?
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if leniency is given to essays where English is not the primary language?
Anonymous wrote:I recently went to a college information session with multiple schools. One of the panelist said to the students in the audience to triple check your spelling, write your own essay and triple check grammar and sentence structure. But then he said any application/essay that does not understand the distinction between 'your' and 'you're' will be immediately discarded.
The other panelists nodded strongly in agreement. I have never heard such a statement at an information session but was actually glad to hear it though the students in the audience were totally silent and stone faced. Some may call the panelists 'grammar nazis' but they are the ones who make the decisions.
Kudos to the panelists! They must be seeing the incorrect usage too frequently.