Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. UVA called me a few years ago about a student . (Emailed me to set up a call first.) So it does happen.
Anonymous wrote:Yale is checking by calling college counselors. UCLA is asking for random applicants to upload pdfs of W2 or paystubs to verify jobs. They are doing a lot more verifying this year
Anonymous wrote:Do the Top10 google kids? I'd do a google check and see what comes up. I was surprised when I googled my kid, his national award and other things, like his math team accomplishments, popped up. Maybe they do this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Volunteering without impact will not have any weight in your application. Don’t worry about it.
He definitely has impact.
Then unless he's Batman, there will be another adult outside of this who could attest to this, and he could also document the impact. Should the activity get questioned, there would be evidence of it.
Well yes, obviously there are adults who know he does this. But there's no place on the app, as far as i can tell, to put a reference.
Anonymous wrote:I think calling organization is super tricky because how does a college get to the correct person who can verify if one person has volunteered? My kid did a paid internship at Microsoft this past year and clearly it's a giant company and my kid interned in a regional office of thousands. When my own kid had a question about his program, he couldn't even reach anyone and he was working through a chain of names he was directly given.
Anonymous wrote:I think calling organization is super tricky because how does a college get to the correct person who can verify if one person has volunteered? My kid did a paid internship at Microsoft this past year and clearly it's a giant company and my kid interned in a regional office of thousands. When my own kid had a question about his program, he couldn't even reach anyone and he was working through a chain of names he was directly given.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD volunteers at Ronald McDonald house. Applied ED to Swarthmore. Someone from Swarthmore called RMH to check.
RMH answered and said "would you like fries with that shake?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Generally the first step is they call the school counselor to see what they know.
What school has the bandwidth to call high school counselors to inquire about some random extracurricular in a laundry list of activities as they review applications from thousands upon thousands of applicants?
The AOs just email to verify, and, trust me, the high schools respond fast because their reputations are on the line!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Generally the first step is they call the school counselor to see what they know.
What school has the bandwidth to call high school counselors to inquire about some random extracurricular in a laundry list of activities as they review applications from thousands upon thousands of applicants?
The AOs just email to verify, and, trust me, the high schools respond fast because their reputations are on the line!