Hi guys! So on July 26 I attended the July Advisory Day(JAD) at The College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. The goal of JAD is to give students guidance and knowledge to help them navigate the college admissions process, specifically in relation to the essay and the interview. I got a lot of valuable information out of it and figured I’d share it with you!
There are two types of interviews, informational and evaluative. Evaluative has more weight in your decision while informational has less weight. Most schools only offer one of the and schools place different values on the interview. Some don’t have them, some are optional, and some require interviews. It depends on the college.
Know when you have to interview by for Early Decision/Early Action and for Regular Decision! Don’t leave it for the last minute!
You aren’t being quizzed, but you should have some knowledge about the school you’re interviewing at. For example, you should know school size, class size, academic programs and extracurriculars that you might be interested and a little bit about the college in general.
Like I said, you aren’t being quizzed, this is a conversation between you and the interviewer. You won’t be asked, “If you were a tree, what kind of tree would (haha) you be and why?” You’re going to be asked about yourself, your interests, your academics, extracurriculars.
Bring a resume to the interview with your education, including the classes you took junior year and are taking senior year, your extracurriculars, any awards or honors you’ve received and service and outreach you’ve done. Give this to the interviewer and they will most likely put this in your admissions file and will help them if the conversation gets stuck!
Dress professionally. Not a $300 suit, but aim for business casual. Guys: khakis and a nice button up in warm weather, switch to navy and maybe add a jacket when it gets cold. Gals: A nice skirt(not a mini skirt, a few inches above the knee max) and top or dress is nice. You don’t need heels so wear what you’re comfortable in. Non-Binary Pals: Take whatever you like from the above two and make it your own. Your expression is your own. Don’t wear sneakers, flip flops, ripped jeans, graphic t-shirts, etc.
Be polite. Make eye contact, don’t swear, thank the interviewer at the end. Show a bit more courtesy than you normally would.
Follow up the interview with a thank you email/thank you note promptly.
Write about what you want, if everyone thinks you should write about one thing but you don’t want to, don’t. The admissions office wants to hear your voice and hear the story that you want to tell.
The Common App/Coalition App prompts are a guide. You don’t have to exactly answer the question.
Don’t try to use fancy words to make yourself sound smarter. Be a polished version of you, not Charles Dickens.
Avoid the “we lost the state game and I learned about teamwork,” “I had a bad sports injury,” and the, “Grandma inspires me” cliche. The admissions officers will tune it out. Sorry.
Write about you. They’re very proud of your friend for doing X but how does that help them get to know you?
Be creative, but make sure that the metaphors you use work and can be understood easily.
Start early and write multiple drafts.
That’s more or less what was discussed at the admissions session, if you have any questions about this, or Holy Cross or what I’m up to you can message me on @ibwater or on here and just include my name and blog in the ask or message!