Anonymous wrote:Sigh, my kid who I think is absolutely charming with a great smile and energy is just completely depleted at this point and his video reflects that. Doesn’t seem like him at all. It’s fine, just boring and no sparkle. Oh well.
Anonymous wrote:Sigh, my kid who I think is absolutely charming with a great smile and energy is just completely depleted at this point and his video reflects that. Doesn’t seem like him at all. It’s fine, just boring and no sparkle. Oh well.
Anonymous wrote:I thought the Glimpse video sounded completely overwhelming but my daughter went to work on it and in 2 hours had turned out one of the coolest things I've ever seen. It's a beautiful summary of who she is.
I don't think she's exceptionally skilled in this area but is just a product of her generation: very familiar with technology, apps, social media, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much of decisions will now ride on the video? Rigor, check. Great grades, check. High test score, check. Essays - several for Brown - check.
And now a video. I know there have been a few threads here and there discussing this, but I'm surprised there isn't more discussion than that on videos. Kid doesn't know where to start - what aspect of him haven't already been covered in the 7 responses to Brown?
While my kid writes all his own essays and I edit, I realize AI might have an impact on admissions even though it is, in my opinion, a terrible tool for this purpose. Is the video the new way around this? Wish we could just dump the essays then.
It also occurs to me that there is nothing stopping unscrupulous applicants from having someone else manufacture a video. How would the college even know the identity of the person actually doing the talking? It's not like you present ID. Sorry for my rant, but it just occurred to me what a mess this is.
Thanks for your response. I imagine my kid would do better in a live interview, with the in-person give-and-take of conversation. We'll see what he comes up with for the video. I hadn't really thought about it until after his app was submitted the other day. He is a very chill person, a thinker and listener more than a talker. Good at asking questions. I might suggest he chat about some topics that are meaningful to him for a 60-second Glimpse, but he did already touch on them in the essays, so maybe that's not really the way to go. Sigh.
I am not 100% certain on this, but I thought the videos were answer to being spread too thin with increased applications and not enough alumni to interview.
If it offers anyone peace, I have a child at Brown, and I didn’t like his much. I shared my opinion, but he kept as is. It showed personality and character, but also broke the supposed rules by reiterating EC’s by showing video of a couple. I really think it’s low stake, just ability to communicate and not a super smarty that won’t ever socialize, engage or leave the dorm room.
Telling them they’re a thinker and a listener more than a talker sounds nice to me even with the honesty this isn’t my “thing”. Then a little story where that was a positive attribute. I think authenticity like essays is a good move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s super interesting on the handwritten, I wonder why. Was it the weeding tool of how interested are you like optional essays are now ?!
Mine liked theirs best as the supplementals came easily, schools with less prompts made them feel like the stakes were higher as less opportunity to show themselves. It’s funny, just reread the prompts from last year, and they really make sense to me now that I know school better.
I also applied to/went to Brown when they required handwritten essays. My understanding at the time was that it was an anti-cheating measure (although there were rumors that they analyzed your handwriting).
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why Brown has to be so literally extra about their applications. It’s always been this way. When I applied (waitlisted but I took myself off of it because I got into a HYP I preferred), they required you to attach a photo of yourself (not a passport photo but one of your chooosing) and you had to hand-write your essay at a time when everyone else was accepting it printed or typed.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why Brown has to be so literally extra about their applications. It’s always been this way. When I applied (waitlisted but I took myself off of it because I got into a HYP I preferred), they required you to attach a photo of yourself (not a passport photo but one of your chooosing) and you had to hand-write your essay at a time when everyone else was accepting it printed or typed.
Anonymous wrote:That’s super interesting on the handwritten, I wonder why. Was it the weeding tool of how interested are you like optional essays are now ?!
Mine liked theirs best as the supplementals came easily, schools with less prompts made them feel like the stakes were higher as less opportunity to show themselves. It’s funny, just reread the prompts from last year, and they really make sense to me now that I know school better.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why Brown has to be so literally extra about their applications. It’s always been this way. When I applied (waitlisted but I took myself off of it because I got into a HYP I preferred), they required you to attach a photo of yourself (not a passport photo but one of your chooosing) and you had to hand-write your essay at a time when everyone else was accepting it printed or typed.