Anonymous wrote:In my day I had a number of alumni interviews and all were at the homes of the interviewers.
My mother waited in the car outside.
Let's put it this way, I had confidence that the Ivy/SLAC alum wasn't going to attack me, bind me up and stuff me in the closet and do all sorts of nasty things to me.... the very thought never even occurred to me. A real shame that it's a sign of our time when we can no longer trust people.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter recently had an interview at Starbucks which went well (according to her).Anonymous wrote:I also stopped doing interviews for my Ivy because it seemed like a waste of time (also, while I understand why the school advised us to no longer interview in our homes, it's actually a PITA to find a public location that is private enough to have a conversation in winter).
I would never allow my daughter to interview in the home of a stranger. Why would anyone trust you or someone they don't know to meet in your private home? DD's Ivy recommended a public meeting place for everyone's comfort. Too bad you think it's a PITA because a kid doesn't want to come to your private home. Smart kids.
Anonymous wrote:Depends upon the school. An alumni interview won't get you in but it can indeed keep you out.Anonymous wrote:For top schools, alumni interviews count for basically nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Stanford web site seems to imply it's not important at all. I think it is (or should be) a pretty important aspect of admission process. Anybody care to comment? TIA
Anonymous wrote:My daughter recently had an interview at Starbucks which went well (according to her).Anonymous wrote:I also stopped doing interviews for my Ivy because it seemed like a waste of time (also, while I understand why the school advised us to no longer interview in our homes, it's actually a PITA to find a public location that is private enough to have a conversation in winter).
I would never allow my daughter to interview in the home of a stranger. Why would anyone trust you or someone they don't know to meet in your private home? DD's Ivy recommended a public meeting place for everyone's comfort. Too bad you think it's a PITA because a kid doesn't want to come to your private home. Smart kids.
+1. My DC absolutely refused to go the interviewer's house. Still got in.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also stopped doing interviews for my Ivy because it seemed like a waste of time (also, while I understand why the school advised us to no longer interview in our homes, it's actually a PITA to find a public location that is private enough to have a conversation in winter).
I'm a Stanford alum and also stopped doing interviews because it was a waste of my time. Although I enjoyed meeting the students, interviews have zero impact on admissions decisions in 99.9% of cases. (The interview nightmare scenario just never happens with these kids -- they're really well-prepared.) With regard to interview location, that was never a problem -- why can't you have a conversation at Panera, LPQ, etc?
Anonymous wrote:I also stopped doing interviews for my Ivy because it seemed like a waste of time (also, while I understand why the school advised us to no longer interview in our homes, it's actually a PITA to find a public location that is private enough to have a conversation in winter).
My daughter recently had an interview at Starbucks which went well (according to her).Anonymous wrote:I also stopped doing interviews for my Ivy because it seemed like a waste of time (also, while I understand why the school advised us to no longer interview in our homes, it's actually a PITA to find a public location that is private enough to have a conversation in winter).
Depends upon the school. An alumni interview won't get you in but it can indeed keep you out.Anonymous wrote:For top schools, alumni interviews count for basically nothing.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I stopped doing the interviews for Columbia a few years ago. Decided it was a waste of my time.