Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Long time Ivy interviewer. Jeans are fine. There is a lot of implicit bias though everywhere so I’d try to look attractive, but no need to be fancy at all.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pro tip do not wear clothing from a different school than the one where you are interviewing.
No one is that dumb.
Anonymous wrote:Long time Ivy interviewer. Jeans are fine. There is a lot of implicit bias though everywhere so I’d try to look attractive, but no need to be fancy at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I interviewed for Yale for 20+ years. We are told not to judge clothing, and kids show up in everything from whatever they wore to school (ripped jeans, sweats, etc) to suits. Kids should absolutely not go shopping for an interview outfit. These are teenagers, and colleges know that not everyone can afford to or wants to buy something new.
Wear something clean without offensive messages on it (no political shirts/hats) or anything too revealing. She'll be find in leggings or jeans and a sweater or plain t-shirt.
I used to interview for Yale too! It was a while ago, so I don't remember that direction. But you really don't think it makes an impression one way or another if a student makes an effort to dress nicely? I'm not talking about a suit here for high school students, but khaki or black pants, shirt or blouse or nice sweater.
You're expected to write a report that discusses your conversation and to rate the student in comparison to other Yale applicants. An interviewer in 1990 might judge based on clothing. But if you interview 5-8 kids a year for 20 years, you see a whole range of outfits and they do not reflect on the student's ability to hold a conversation, speak about their favorite classes or discuss their interests. That's what's going into the report.
Dirty, sloppy dressing reflects poorly. But I would hope that no interviewer judges kids based on what a typical 18 year old wears on a daily basis.
Anonymous wrote:My daughters wore skirt and blazer, heels. Professional attire
Anonymous wrote:Pro tip do not wear clothing from a different school than the one where you are interviewing.
Anonymous wrote:Last year, my son had a tour followed by an interview. He wore sneakers, khakis and a button down, and threw a hoodie on over top. After the tour finished, he dashed outside to the car to put on a jacket and tie and swap sneaks for dress shoes.
An admissions staffer who saw the before/after commented favorably on the effort he put into dressing up for the interview portion. Sometimes the nonverbal messages mean a lot.
He was admitted.
Anonymous wrote:My daughters wore skirt and blazer, heels. Professional attire
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I interviewed for Yale for 20+ years. We are told not to judge clothing, and kids show up in everything from whatever they wore to school (ripped jeans, sweats, etc) to suits. Kids should absolutely not go shopping for an interview outfit. These are teenagers, and colleges know that not everyone can afford to or wants to buy something new.
Wear something clean without offensive messages on it (no political shirts/hats) or anything too revealing. She'll be find in leggings or jeans and a sweater or plain t-shirt.
I used to interview for Yale too! It was a while ago, so I don't remember that direction. But you really don't think it makes an impression one way or another if a student makes an effort to dress nicely? I'm not talking about a suit here for high school students, but khaki or black pants, shirt or blouse or nice sweater.

Anonymous wrote:I interviewed for Yale for 20+ years. We are told not to judge clothing, and kids show up in everything from whatever they wore to school (ripped jeans, sweats, etc) to suits. Kids should absolutely not go shopping for an interview outfit. These are teenagers, and colleges know that not everyone can afford to or wants to buy something new.
Wear something clean without offensive messages on it (no political shirts/hats) or anything too revealing. She'll be find in leggings or jeans and a sweater or plain t-shirt.