The 6 Most Common College Application Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

marketplace blog3

by Danika Miller

1. Skimping on Details

Filling out college applications is a lot of work, especially if you plan to apply to a lot of schools. It can be easy for details to slip through the cracks and tempting to keep your application simple. But colleges need a full picture of who you are and evidence that you’re serious about attending their school.

For example, when listing activities, you should also detail how you participated. In high school, it’s pretty easy to “join” a club and just show up to the first and last meetings.

Listing things you were involved in will mean more to colleges if you can detail the impact you made and how you participated. Make sure those details are accurate, too.

“Students go to school, do homework, study, eat dinner, and sleep,” said Laurie Kopp Weingarten, certified educational planner and president of One-Stop College Counseling. “If you claim to have 10 hours per day of activities after school, it’s not believable!”

Before you turn in your application, be sure to review it several times before submitting. Many students accidentally use incorrect grammar or leave in the name of a different school, according to admissions experts.

2. Missing Deadlines

This may seem obvious, but missing college application deadlines is another common application mishap. The official application deadline isn’t the only date students will need to keep track of; there are also deadlines you’ll need to meet to collect specific application materials in time, such as transcripts, recommendation letters, and test scores.

Students are responsible for researching specific program dates as well.

“For example, students submitting portfolios, applying to honors colleges, or pursuing BFA programs have much earlier deadlines,” said Rachel Coleman, independent education consultant and co-founder of College Essay Editor.

3. Dishonest or Negative Character

A college will deny you admittance if your application or history indicates any negative character traits.

“Colleges are looking to admit students with strong character,” explained Weingarten. “When reviewing an application, they don’t want to see arrogance, cheating, or somebody who is not a team player. If those unappealing qualities come through in an application, the student is not going to be admitted.”

This kind of mistake can manifest in your essay or written responses as well as your school record. Coleman listed things like a history of violence, plagiarism, dislike of learning, and sense of entitlement as common disqualifiers.

In your essays, make sure you aren’t putting others down to build yourself up.

“We’ve explained to many students why the following sentence doesn’t go over well: ‘While my friends partied at the beach all summer, I was productive, working hard at my Carvel job,'” said Weingarten.

4. Lack of Effort

It will be pretty clear to admissions counselors if you don’t put effort into your college application. Your application should demonstrate a passion for your goals and the school you’re applying to.

Admissions committees can tell if you’re a serious applicant depending on whether you miss sections, fail to edit your essay, or generally do the bare minimum it takes to apply. For example, one common mistake is essay responses that don’t answer the prompt or are recycled from other applications.

Be sure to submit every application material a school asks for. These materials may include recommendation letters, official transcripts, and SAT or ACT scores.

“Students don’t always realize that clicking ‘submit’ on the Common App doesn’t mean they’re done!” warned Coleman.

5. Not Showing Specific Interest

Colleges want to admit students who are passionate about attending and have demonstrated that interest. Naming the wrong institution in the essay is a common mistake.

“Admissions officers have shared with us how incredibly often this happens,” said Weingarten. “They will be reading a wonderful essay about why the student wants to attend Dartmouth College, and then the ending will enthusiastically declare, ‘And that’s why the University of Pennsylvania would be the ideal place for me to attend.'”

Similarly, essays that are intentionally vague so that they can be used for multiple applications are an obvious red flag.

“Rejected applications tend to have very general essays, i.e., essays not tailored to the specific qualities of an individual school,” said Coleman.

6. Avoiding the Optional Essay

Even if a college application essay says it’s optional, it’s not really optional. Skipping the essay can often mean you’ll be denied acceptance.

According to Coleman, this is a common ploy by colleges and universities to ascertain students’ interest in the school. “[Making an essay optional] is a bit of a trick colleges play to see if the student is a hard worker, or actually wants to attend the school,” she said.

If students do the bare minimum on their applications, colleges will assume they’ll do the bare minimum in school.

发表回复

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注