Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s depends on the school. You can view their profiles for the school you are applying to. For example, here is Amherst: https://www.amherst.edu/admission/staff
Thank you for posting this.
Interesting how reading the admissions officers brief profiles affected my view & understanding of Amherst College & reminded me of the overwhelming liberalism of the Pioneer Valley colleges.
There’s nothing political about these bios, unless you’re nervous that people read, cycle, and hike
+1, the bios are nearly identical to the ones at Pomona, for reference: https://www.pomona.edu/admissions/connect/admissions-officer . Has nothing to do with the area.
Is this a good thing? If Amherst doesn't understand your accomplishments so will every other college? Each school should be different.
What? No people just like reading and hiking, no matter where they are in the US.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s depends on the school. You can view their profiles for the school you are applying to. For example, here is Amherst: https://www.amherst.edu/admission/staff
Thank you for posting this.
Interesting how reading the admissions officers brief profiles affected my view & understanding of Amherst College & reminded me of the overwhelming liberalism of the Pioneer Valley colleges.
There’s nothing political about these bios, unless you’re nervous that people read, cycle, and hike
+1, the bios are nearly identical to the ones at Pomona, for reference: https://www.pomona.edu/admissions/connect/admissions-officer . Has nothing to do with the area.
Is this a good thing? If Amherst doesn't understand your accomplishments so will every other college? Each school should be different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very young
Very progressive
Imagine someone like AOC reviewing most apps and deciding who goes to committee.
I would like to nominate the above for "post of the year".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you can look online. my Type A kid worked some essays for specific regional AOs in mind.
Same. And it worked.
A year ago or so there were some controversial posts about young URM AOs admitting more candidates “like them”. The post was locked but had a lot of truth in it re AOs.
Where is this post?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you can look online. my Type A kid worked some essays for specific regional AOs in mind.
Same. And it worked.
A year ago or so there were some controversial posts about young URM AOs admitting more candidates “like them”. The post was locked but had a lot of truth in it re AOs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s depends on the school. You can view their profiles for the school you are applying to. For example, here is Amherst: https://www.amherst.edu/admission/staff
Thank you for posting this.
Interesting how reading the admissions officers brief profiles affected my view & understanding of Amherst College & reminded me of the overwhelming liberalism of the Pioneer Valley colleges.
There’s nothing political about these bios, unless you’re nervous that people read, cycle, and hike
+1, the bios are nearly identical to the ones at Pomona, for reference: https://www.pomona.edu/admissions/connect/admissions-officer . Has nothing to do with the area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think at my state school grad students do essay review for a 2nd job.
So a bachelor's degree is a minimum ??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s depends on the school. You can view their profiles for the school you are applying to. For example, here is Amherst: https://www.amherst.edu/admission/staff
Thank you for posting this.
Interesting how reading the admissions officers brief profiles affected my view & understanding of Amherst College & reminded me of the overwhelming liberalism of the Pioneer Valley colleges.
There’s nothing political about these bios, unless you’re nervous that people read, cycle, and hike
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s depends on the school. You can view their profiles for the school you are applying to. For example, here is Amherst: https://www.amherst.edu/admission/staff
Thank you for posting this.
Interesting how reading the admissions officers brief profiles affected my view & understanding of Amherst College & reminded me of the overwhelming liberalism of the Pioneer Valley colleges.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t want to say how I figured this out. DC at Harvard. File read by two AOs — first one is grad student at H, but undergrad school is not even Top 200! Comes from a FG family (due to scholarship name). Ugh — she had no idea what to make of DC’s file and the bias was clear! I’m a SAHM and DC is very accomplished in this one field that the AO did not understand at all. Luckily the second reader was more experienced and from a prestigious SLAC — she said she liked DC and gave higher ratings. Truly, it’s all luck!
I watched this YT video of a former Harvard AP saying he comes from this place in CA with a lot of Vietnamese. And when he joined H, he did not understand why none of them were there so he started advocating for them! So if you don’t have an AO who understands your accomplishments or is not from a similar background or just doesn’t get you, you’re SOL. It really does come down to luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they typically men or women?
Any #s out there reporting this?
Who are the people reading kids' essays and judging them into a pile in less than 10 minutes? What are their qualifications usually?
Why do you care, and what do you wish to do with this info?