Friday, August 21, 2020
The Five Biggest Mistakes in College Application Supplemental Essays TKG
The Five Biggest Mistakes in College Application Supplemental Essays When you apply to college, just about every school will receive the same transcript, test scores, essay, resume, and Common App info. Supplements, then, are your place to stand out. Not every college has a supplement, but for those that do the supplement is a key piece of our application since itâs the only place thatâs just for them.If youâre applying to more than a handful of schools, the supplements can quickly become overwhelming. If you approach them strategically, youâll do just fine, but there are a few things we warn students to avoid. Here are our top 5 worst things you can do in a supplement.Mixing up schools in your âwhy this schoolâ supplementThe most popular question colleges ask is some variation on âwhy us?â Itâs a good question, but it can also be frustrating to answer the same question over and over. Finding ways to repurpose supplements is key to keeping yourself sane, but be very careful. Every year, countless students submit an application with t he wrong schoolâs name in the âwhy this school?â supplement. Sounds stupid, we know, but it happens. Proofread a million times and be careful with âcut pasteâ. Donât let a stupid silly mistake like sending a supplement advocating for why you want to go to Stanford to Northwestern.Not knowing the school youâre applying to in and out This next one ties into the much-too-common mistake of mixing up schools. One of the things that can cause a school-name-mixup is not customizing the âwhy this school?â supplement to fit each school you are applying to.Research is king. A large part of the purpose of the âwhy this school?â supplement is to test whether you know anything at all about the school. If you say you want to major in Business, but it's really called Economics, thatâs a big red x on your application. And you also probably shouldn't apply. If you donât name a specific program, a few classes you want to take, and an extracurricular youâd like to be invol ved in, thatâs also a red flag. For bonus points, mention a professor youâd like to work with too. Unsure of what youâre majoring inâ"today youâre not. You know, youâre passionate, and you know the details of their program.These supplements do range in length from a small 100 words up to a full 650, so youâll have to scale the amount of detail to fit the size, but the bare minimum checklist is:MajorClass (and why you think it would benefit you)Extracurricular(s)Being vague so you donât have to work hard Youâll notice that all of these mistakes tie together, and this one isnât any different. The third worst thing you can do in your supplements is the opposite of being well researched: itâs being vague. If youâve read our posts before, you know that weâre all about detail and specificity. Inch wide, mile deep. Trying to make one supplement work for multiple colleges can corrode good writing. That doesnât mean you shouldnât find ways to make pieces multi-fu nctional, but youâre going to have to do better than writing a vague 300 words and changing a sentence or two so it works for both âWhat is your favorite book?â and âWhat inspires you?âInstead, when you see an opportunity to reuse a piece of a supplement, copy and paste those specific sections into the new document, rearrange them, and fill in the gaps with new stories, details, and images to create a custom fit with the question.Being redundant and only showing one side of yourselfWe know, you want to look perfect, but perfect is boring. If you spend your college essay trying to look amazing, then your supplements trying to look amazing, youâve created an application thatâs tedious to read through. The supplements should be a place to continue to apply layers of nuance and unexpectedness to your application. This means no repeated stories, but it also means consciously focusing on how you can reveal more about yourself in ways that feel organic.Before you start writin g your supplements, make a list of traits you want your application to show. As you write, keep those traits in mind and, once you think you are done, check each supplement to verify that youâve hit every mark.Only answering the questionThe last truly egregious mistake that we see kids make is doing exactly what they were taught to do in schoolâ"answer the question, avoid fluff, and donât say more than the bare minimum.That may work in a history class, but that doesnât work here. The question does need to be answered, yes, but only answering the question is like giving them a bacon, egg, and cheese, but leaving out the bacon. It might still taste good, but itâs not what theyâre looking for.Stories are what makes supplements readable after weeks of pouring over applications. Scenes are what pull readers in and get them to share an application with their colleagues, saying âyouâve got to see this!âWhether itâs a sentence in a 100-word response or a few paragraphs an swering a 500-word prompt, never lose sight of the story.Bonus: Thinking âoptionalâ supplements are optional One last quick one. When it says âoptionalâ that means âwe dare you not to do it.â Supplements are not optional unless you are trying not to get in, in which case we say âhuh?â Want to avoid all these silly mistakes? Weâre pros at helping kids writing stellar supplements.
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