Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh my. Parent of a junior. I'm assuming those who are applying to 15+ schools are applying to many that have a common application. Cannot imagine writing supplemental essays for 15 schools?
This!
Running out of steam for sure. So many supplemental essays. Try to get your junior to do as much work next summer on the essays. it’s really difficult to balance all the demands and fun of senior year.
The problem is that you don't have access to any of the supplemental essays/questions until the schools open their individual applications within the common app in early September. You can write the common app essays, but that's about it.
You can apply via common app and still have supplemental essays. They are not mutually exclusive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh my. Parent of a junior. I'm assuming those who are applying to 15+ schools are applying to many that have a common application. Cannot imagine writing supplemental essays for 15 schools?
This!
Running out of steam for sure. So many supplemental essays. Try to get your junior to do as much work next summer on the essays. it’s really difficult to balance all the demands and fun of senior year.
The problem is that you don't have access to any of the supplemental essays/questions until the schools open their individual applications within the common app in early September. You can write the common app essays, but that's about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh my. Parent of a junior. I'm assuming those who are applying to 15+ schools are applying to many that have a common application. Cannot imagine writing supplemental essays for 15 schools?
This!
Running out of steam for sure. So many supplemental essays. Try to get your junior to do as much work next summer on the essays. it’s really difficult to balance all the demands and fun of senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh my. Parent of a junior. I'm assuming those who are applying to 15+ schools are applying to many that have a common application. Cannot imagine writing supplemental essays for 15 schools?
This!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. My DS has applied to 8 so far -- 1 ED, 6 EA, 1 RD w/an 11/15 deadline. He'll add 5 UC campuses by 11/30. Depending on the outcome of this early round, he's ready to max out his Common App with another 13 schools to make for a total of 26. (One of the ones already submitted had to be done via the Coalition App.) His list is entirely composed of what should be targets and safeties - no reaches.
Strange strategy if you are not making it up. If you bother to apply to 26 why not include a few reaches?
DP: They are probably looking for merit aid offers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter was complaining about using the common app to apply for 8 schools. My husband and I each applied to 6 schools in the early 90s using a typewriter! These kids have it easy!!!!!
Disagree. I applied to college in those days, and I find the new process harder. The Common App helps with some degree in not having to retype basic info, but the additional questions asked by every college (some that basically recreate the app, not to mention supplemental essays) and requests for additional documentation, all presented in slightly different formats, make it more complicated and easier to mess up. We just realized that DC missed EA at one school because his transcript wasn’t presented in exactly the right way for that school (even though it’s been fine for every other). Add in the Coalition App, and things like the SRAR, it’s very time consuming.
Totally agree. The phrase "Common App" is deceptive for all of the reasons you list. On the surface, it sounds great - you supposedly enter all your information once and then only have to worry about supplemental essays. This is not true at all. Each school has some version of the same questions that you have to enter from scratch, each time. Residency was just one subject that was asked in different ways by all of the schools DC applied to. Very tedious and time-consuming.
DP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter was complaining about using the common app to apply for 8 schools. My husband and I each applied to 6 schools in the early 90s using a typewriter! These kids have it easy!!!!!
Disagree. I applied to college in those days, and I find the new process harder. The Common App helps with some degree in not having to retype basic info, but the additional questions asked by every college (some that basically recreate the app, not to mention supplemental essays) and requests for additional documentation, all presented in slightly different formats, make it more complicated and easier to mess up. We just realized that DC missed EA at one school because his transcript wasn’t presented in exactly the right way for that school (even though it’s been fine for every other). Add in the Coalition App, and things like the SRAR, it’s very time consuming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh my. Parent of a junior. I'm assuming those who are applying to 15+ schools are applying to many that have a common application. Cannot imagine writing supplemental essays for 15 schools?
This!
It is not as hard as you think. There are common themes. After 5 schools it becomes repetitive.