Video: Common Application Rollover
Juniors, you can start filling out your CA now, and roll it over later this summer once it has been updated for your application period. Check out the CA’s how-to video, and get started filling it out today!
Juniors, you can start filling out your CA now, and roll it over later this summer once it has been updated for your application period. Check out the CA’s how-to video, and get started filling it out today!
Just in time for Valentine’s Day, but applicable all year ’round, here is an idea from Kinana Qaddour for using the popular Times podcast to encourage narrative writing.
Modern Love is a series of weekly reader-submitted essays that explore the joys and tribulations of love. Each week, an actor also reads one of the essays in a podcast. Though the stories are often about romantic love, they also take on love of family, friends, and even pets. This teacher finds their themes universal and the range of essays engaging models to help her students find their own voices.
In my work, I have found that most students have little or no experience writing personal narratives, which they need to write for the personal statement/Common Application essay requirement when applying to college. Naturally, I love this idea—so give it a read and share with a teacher who may find it useful!
Announcement:
We are pleased to share the 2017-2018 Common Application essay prompts with you. The changes you see below reflect the feedback of 108 Common App member colleges and more than 5,000 other Common App constituents, as well as consultation with our advisory committees and Board of Directors. Students represented the single largest share of constituent survey respondents (59%), followed by school counselors (23%), and teachers (11%).
We were gratified to learn that 91% of members and 90% of constituents agree or strongly agree that the current prompts are effective. In addition, the narrative comments we received helped us see areas for improvement in three of the prompts. Working in close consultation with the counselors and admission officers on our advisory committees, we revised these prompts in a way that we believe will help students see expanded opportunities for expressing themselves. Those revisions appear in italics. You will also notice two new prompts. The first asks students to share examples of their intellectual curiosity. The second is a return to inviting students to submit an essay on a topic of their choice, reframed to help students understand that they are welcome to draw inspiration from multiple sources, not just their own creativity.
The word limit on the essay will remain at 650.
The goal of these revisions is to help all applicants, regardless of background or access to counseling, see themselves and their stories within the prompts. They are designed to invite unencumbered discussions of character and community, identity, and aspiration. To this end, we will be creating new educational resources to help students both understand and approach the opportunities the essay presents for them.
2017-2018 Common Application Essay Prompts
1. Some students have a background, identity, interest, or talent that is so meaningful they believe their application would be incomplete without it. If this sounds like you, then please share your story. [No change]
2. The lessons we take from obstacles we encounter can be fundamental to later success. Recount a time when you faced a challenge, setback, or failure. How did it affect you, and what did you learn from the experience? [Revised]
3. Reflect on a time when you questioned or challenged a belief or idea. What prompted your thinking? What was the outcome? [Revised]
4. Describe a problem you’ve solved or a problem you’d like to solve. It can be an intellectual challenge, a research query, an ethical dilemma – anything that is of personal importance, no matter the scale. Explain its significance to you and what steps you took or could be taken to identify a solution. [No change]
5. Discuss an accomplishment, event, or realization that sparked a period of personal growth and a new understanding of yourself or others. [Revised]
6. Describe a topic, idea, or concept you find so engaging that it makes you lose all track of time. Why does it captivate you? What or who do you turn to when you want to learn more? [New]
7. Share an essay on any topic of your choice. It can be one you’ve already written, one that responds to a different prompt, or one of your own design. [New]
Ben Orlin is right, college admissions is crazypants. The Business Insider article that stemmed from his Twitter post is worth a read.
Rejection by a university ought to feel like getting swiped left on Tinder,” he wrote. “There’s nothing terribly personal about it. The admissions office doesn’t really know you. The university is just looking out for its own interests, and you don’t happen to fit into the picture.
Orlin’s hesitation to be a part of a process that results in near total disappointment for applicants is even more understandable when looking at Ivy League acceptance rates.
For the class of 2020 the admission rate is below 10% for almost all Ivy League schools.
He flips that number around to talk about how many rejection letters Yale doles out.
No matter how sincere their intentions, the Yale admissions team is beholden to grim statistical reality: 94% of students are getting rejection letters,” he wrote.
Orlin suggests that Ivy League admission decisions should be chosen by lottery, and have base requirements that students must meet before applying in the first place. Will it happen? No. But something needs to be done.
A few important, key insights from the 2016 Inside Higher Ed Survey of College and University Admissions Directors. Read all of the notes on key themes in the full article by Scott Jaschik on Inside Higher Ed here.
A New Application
A year ago, the big buzz at the NACAC annual meeting was the announcement of the Coalition for Access, Affordability and Success, a group of elite public and private colleges that aimed to make the application process more personal, more open to the needs of individual students and colleges and more educational. At the NACAC meeting, coalition members heard plenty of skepticism and vowed to explain in the months ahead just what their effort entailed and why it would help colleges and students.
To judge from the Inside Higher Ed survey, the coalition still has a lot of work to do. Among the findings:
Annie Reznik, executive director of the coalition, said she wasn’t surprised by some of the negative reactions, even if she thought they might not reflect the work the group has been doing. “Any new initiative brings hesitancy and skepticism,” she said via email.
And much of the initial public discussion, she said, didn’t focus on efforts by member colleges to increase outreach to disadvantaged students. Numerous efforts have been started in recent months by the group and by its member colleges to increase college awareness in low-income areas and to talk to more students about the importance of college. In time, she said, people will see that the coalition is about these efforts, not just the application.
Much has been misunderstood about the locker, she said, but that is proceeding with positive results. “Many individuals external to the coalition have identified additional, excellent uses for this student space,” she said. “Some ideas include: supporting a portfolio grading system using the locker, encouraging students to save pieces from an English class’s personal writing unit in their lockers, collecting letters of recommendation from service work that could be shared with a teacher or counselor, scanning a copy of a student’s hard-earned compliment card for providing great service at work.”
The New SAT
Since Inside Higher Ed‘s 2015 admissions survey, the College Board has started using a new SAT, designed to align itself more closely than the previous version with a college-preparatory high school curriculum. A key feature of the new SAT was to revamp the widely criticized writing test.
The response of admissions directors to these changes appears underwhelming. And the new writing test is not attracting broad support. Nor is ACT’s writing test.
Admissions Directors on the SAT and ACT Writing Tests
Statement | Strongly Agree | Agree | Neutral | Disagree | Strongly Disagree |
The new SAT version represents a significant improvement over the old version. | 2% | 12% | 65% | 13% | 9% |
I expect more colleges to go test optional in the years ahead. | 26% | 47% | 22% | 4% | 2% |
I consider the writing test on the SAT to be a good measure of student writing ability. | 0% | 19% | 44% | 21% | 16% |
I consider the writing test on the ACT to be a good measure of student writing ability. | 2% | 18% | 44% | 22% | 15% |
The expectation that more colleges will go test optional may be of concern to both the College Board and the ACT, although it is important to note that most applicants to most test-optional colleges continue to submit scores.
But the test-optional numbers are growing. Just this week, the National Center for Fair and Open Testing, a critic of standardized testing, released data showing that half of the colleges on U.S. News & World Report‘s list of the top 100 liberal arts colleges are test optional.
Also this week, ACT released a report questioning the rationale behind colleges going test optional. The report says that these policies are based on false assumptions and that test scores add to the information admissions officers need.
Race and Admissions
The Supreme Court ruled in June that colleges have the right to consider race and ethnicity in admissions (and presumably also in financial aid) in certain circumstances. The ruling came in a challenge to the policies of the University of Texas at Austin in litigation that had been going on for years. The Supreme Court ruling cited the research Texas did over the years to show why it needed to consider race in admissions — and the decision said that colleges need to have conducted such studies to consider race.
The survey results suggest that relatively few colleges have done or plan to do such studies. This may be because many colleges do not consider race in admissions (and aren’t competitive in admissions). But this could make some colleges vulnerable to lawsuits.
Nearly three-fourths (73 percent) of admissions directors said they believed the Supreme Court ruling would preserve the legal right to consider race and ethnicity for the foreseeable future.
But only 13 percent of colleges said they conducted studies similar to those the Supreme Court cited as making the Texas approach legal. And only 24 percent said they planned to either start or continue such studies.
Only 4 percent said they planned to change admissions practices in light of the court’s ruling.
Critics of affirmative action, during the months before the Supreme Court ruled, repeatedly argued that colleges’ current practices have the impact of making it more difficult for Asian-American applicants to win admission.
This year’s survey asked the admissions directors two questions related to that argument. A significant minority indicated that they believe Asian-American applicants are held to a higher standard generally, and that this is the case at their institutions.
Admissions Directors on Asian-American Applicants
Statement | Public % Yes | Private % Yes |
Do you believe that some colleges are holding Asian-American applicants to higher standards? | 39% | 42% |
At your college, do Asian-American applicants who are admitted generally have higher grades and test scores than other applicants? | 41% | 30% |
As you determine if you are going to apply to a school ED, or a few schools EA or REA, it may be helpful to know last years early admit rates. Early admit rates tend to be much higher than RD admit rates. Check out where the schools on your list stand, below!
Institution (Plan) | Applied | Admitted | Rate | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amherst (ED) | 454 | 180 | 40% | Link |
Boston College (REA) | 8,600 | 2,700 | 31% | Link |
Boston University (ED) | 3,461 | 1,050 | 30% | Link |
Bowdoin (ED1) | 614 | 207 | 34% | Link |
Brown (ED) | 3,030 | 669 | 22% | Link |
Columbia (ED) | 3,520 | Link | ||
Cornell (ED) | 4,882 | 1,337 | 27% | Link |
Dartmouth (ED) | 1,927 | 494 | 26% | Link |
Davidson (ED) | 692 | 290 | 42% | Link |
Dickinson (ED1) | 251 | 220 | 88% | Link |
Duke (ED) | 3,455 | 818 | 24% | Link |
George Washington (ED) | 1,373 | 841 | 61% | Link |
Georgetown (REA) | 7,027 | 892 | 13% | Link |
Georgia Tech (EA) | 14,861 | 4,424 | 30% | Link |
Hamilton (ED) | 578 | 240 | 42% | Link |
Harvard (SCEA) | 6,173 | 918 | 15% | Link |
Harvey Mudd (ED) | 464 | 77 | 17% | Link |
Johns Hopkins (ED) | 1,907 | 559 | 29% | Link |
Kenyon (ED) | 378 | 240 | 63% | Link |
Middlebury (ED) | 954 | 398 | 42% | Link |
MIT (EA) | 7,767 | 656 | 8% | Link |
Northwestern (ED) | 3,022 | 1,061 | 35% | Link |
Pitzer (ED) | 423 | 117 | 28% | Link |
Pomona (ED) | 914 | 177 | 19% | Link |
Princeton (SCEA) | 4,229 | 767 | 18% | Link |
Scripps (ED) | 236 | 113 | 48% | Link |
Stanford (REA) | 7,822 | 745 | 10% | Link |
Tufts (ED) | 2,070 | 663 | 32% | Link |
Union College (ED) | 400 | 228 | 57% | Link |
University of Georgia (EA) | 14,516 | 7,500 | 52% | Link |
UNC – Chapel Hill (EA) | 19,682 | 6,948 | 35% | Link |
Notre Dame (REA) | 5,321 | 1,610 | 30% | Link |
UPenn (ED) | 5,762 | 1,335 | 23% | Link |
Virginia (EA) | 16,768 | 5,203 | 31% | Link |
Vanderbilt (ED) | 3,400 | 800 | 24% | Link |
Wesleyan (ED) | 1,009 | 381 | 38% | Link |
Williams (ED) | 585 | 246 | 42% | Link |
Yale (SCEA) | 4,662 | 795 | 17% | Link |
Source: College Kickstart
Tags: Boston College, Brown, Class of 2020, Colorado College, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Davidson,Dickinson, Duke, Early Action, Early Admission, Early Decision, Georgetown, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Hamilton,Harvard, Harvey Mudd, Johns Hopkins, Middlebury, MIT, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Pitzer, Pomona,Princeton, Scripps, Stanford, University of Pennsylvania, University of Virginia, Vanderbilt, Wesleyan, Williams,Yale
Many schools have updated/changed their admission plans this year. College Kickstart compiled a list that I include below. Make sure you are up to date!
Institution | ED1 | ED2 | EA1 | EA2 | REA | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Assumption College | + | ED1 added | ||||
California State Polytechnic University – San Luis Obispo | – | ED1 removed | ||||
Drake University | – | EA2 removed | ||||
Elmira College | – | – | + | ED1/2 replaced with EA | ||
Fairfield University | + | ED2 added | ||||
Haverford College | + | ED2 added | ||||
Loyola Marymount University | + | ED1 added | ||||
Pace University | + | + | ED1 and EA2 added | |||
Providence College | + | ED2 added | ||||
Saint Anselm | + | ED1 added | ||||
Seton Hall University | + | EA2 added | ||||
Texas A&M University – Engineering | + | EA added for engineering | ||||
The New School – Eugene Lang | – | + | ED replaced with EA | |||
Tulane University | + | – | SCEA replaced with ED1 | |||
University of Chicago | + | + | ED1/2 added | |||
University of Illinois – Urbana Champaign | + | Revamped EA | ||||
University of Miami | + | ED2 added | ||||
Wake Forest University | + | ED2 added | ||||
Wellesley College | + | ED2 added | ||||
Wheaton College – MA | + | ED2 added | ||||
Willamette University | – | ED2 removed |
Source: College Kickstart
Tags: Assumption, Cal Poly SLO, Class of 20201, Drake, Early Admission, Elmira, Fairfield, Haverford, Loyola Marymount, New School (Eugene Lang), Pace, Providence, Saint Anselm, Seton Hall, Texas A&M, Tulane,University of Chicago, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Miami, Wake Forest, Wellesley,Wheaton – MA, Willamette
I just returned from a two-week trip to California, where I was helping run a Common App and essay writing workshop at Hammer Prep, in San Diego. The workshops (we run two) are always a blast, and students leave with:
Many students will also leave with:
If you are located in the San Diego area, I highly suggest checking out Hammer and asking about next years workshops for your rising juniors! I hope to be there again 🙂
As per the folks at the CA, despite account rollover this year, that app will still go offline:
Refresh, unwind, take a break! The 2015-2016 Common Application will be offline starting at 5 p.m. EDT on Thursday, July 21. We’re putting the final touches on the 2016-2017 Common Application, but we’ll be back on August 1 – ready and refreshed for the new school year.
Boo!
So happy Indiana and Wisconsin will now be on the CA. It is always helpful to students (and counselors) to have one less school specific app to proofread. Big time-saver!
New Members of The Common Application
United States
Alvernia University
Antioch College
Baker University
Bard College at Simon’s Rock
Baylor University
Benedictine College
Benedictine University
Bowling Green State University-Main Campus
Carthage College
Concordia College at Moorhead
Concordia University Chicago
D’Youville College
Dean College
Eastern Kentucky University
Edgewood College
George Mason University
Goddard College
Hastings College
Indiana University-Bloomington
Keiser University Flagship Campus – West Palm Beach Florida
Massachusetts College of Art and Design
Middle Tennessee State University
North Park University
Northwest Nazarene University
Ohio University
Paul Smith’s College
St. Andrews University (NC)
Stephens College
The Culinary Institute of America (CA)
The Culinary Institute of America (NY)
The Culinary Institute of America (TX)
Touro College
University of Akron Main Campus
University of Alabama at Birmingham
University of Bridgeport
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Western Illinois University
International
Birmingham City University
Bishop’s University
Doshisha University, The Institute for the Liberal Arts
IE University
Quest University Canada
Saint Louis University-Madrid
University of East Anglia
University of Hong Kong
University of Lincoln
University of Warwick
University of Worcester