Sunday, August 16, 2020
How to Avoid Costly Mistakes on Your Common Application - guest article by Nancy Griesemer
How to Avoid Costly Mistakes on Your Common Application - guest article by Nancy Griesemer Introduction by Brenda Bernstein: As college application deadlines approach, I wanted to share some tips on the actual submission of your application. I give this same advice to job seekers by the way (âPrint your resume!â). We have been so lulled by the convenience of online forms that we forget to dot our iâs and cross our tâs. On the Common Application, carelessness can lead to errors and missing information. Following the advice in Nancy Griesemerâs article below might be the most important thing you do as you prepare to submit your college applications! Its All About the Print Preview or Why Your Application Looks Funny by Nancy Griesemer In the old days, applying to college required a dependable typewriter and gallons of correction fluid. Although it was a tedious process that kept application production to a minimum, final documents told a story and reflected something about the care with which the entire application package was put together. These days, every document submitted through an electronic system like the Common Application looks exactly the sameâ"tediously the same. Instead of style and neatness, what differentiates applications is attention to small details and the ability to navigate limitations imposed by the software controlling the submission. And keep in mind, what colleges see is exactly what you see when you preview the document. So its up to you to check for accuracy, completeness, and how well the document âpresentsâ to readers looking at hundreds of virtually identical forms. This holds true for the Common Application, the Universal College Application (UCA) or most other applications you submit electronically. And this is why all systems strongly suggest you âPrint Previewâ your document before pushing the submit buttonâ"regardless of how tired you are or how close you are coming to deadline. Otherwise, you risk sending a document that may contain errors or is weirdly cutoff. In case youâre curious, this is because when you complete an application online, your response is posted in an efficient âvariable-widthâ typeface. Systems can only enforce a character count and cannot measure the physical length of a response. And not all characters are created equal. For example, the Common Application sets a 1000 character limit on the question asking you to âbriefly elaborate on one of your extracurricular activities or work experiences.â The suggested âwordâ limit is 150 words or fewer. But because characters are not equal in the amount of space they take up, your essay can easily exceed the word limit imposed by the document. If you doubt this is the case, try typing 1000 âWâsâ or âMâsâ and paste your âdocumentâ into the answer box. Youâll find that all are happily accepted by the program. Now, press preview. What you will see is only about half of your âdocument.â If you substitute with 1000 âiâsâ, you will see all of the document plus lots of additional white space allowing for even more characters. âWâsâ and âMâsâ take up way more space than âiâs.â In the Common Application, the problem occurs not only in the short answer section but also in the fill-in-the blank responses in the âExtracurricular Activities and Work Experienceâ section. Even if the application allows you to describe in detail all the awards and honors you received as a member of your high school dance team, itâs possible they will not all show up on the documents colleges actually read. A second, more obscure formatting problem involves spacing. If you persist in hitting the âenterâ key for multiple paragraphs or if you like to write in haikus, you easily run the risk of scrolling beyond the space allotted for an essay response, regardless of the word or character limit. The Common Application appears to allow no more than eight single lines in the 150 word short answer, even if those lines are single words and fall well within all limitations. Finally, please be aware that neither the Common App nor the UCA âspellchecksâ your documents. For those of you who print previewed your documents after pushing the âsubmitâ button and noted some truncating, donât despair. If you stayed within the character limitâ"in other words, if the application allowed you to type your entire answer, the data is still there. It is available to readers if they care to take the time to go back into the system and read the complete answer. I wonât lie to you, however. Itâs not easy to retrieve the data, and itâs extremely unlikely that the average admissions reader will bother. And sad to say, spelling errors are yours to own. Keep in mind that you may correct both of these problems in alternate versions of your electronic application. You cannot resend, but you can make corrections for applications you send in the future. So what should you do? Previewâ"not just for typos but also for what shows up on the document. If truncating occurs in such a way that the response makes no sense, go back and edit. Look for extra words and tighten up your prose or paragraphing. For other responses, use standard or easy-to-understand abbreviations (capt. for captain). Do not use text-speak or nonstandard abbreviations. Unfortunately, there is a little more bad news for users of the Common Application. The Common Appâs system requirements list a limited number of âsupported browsers,â which include modern versions of Internet Explorer and Safari, among others. Students using Safari, however, have reported problems previewing applications. And anyone using an older version of Internet Explorer or Chrome could be out of luck. Hopefully, these issues will be corrected in next yearâs version of the Common App. For now, youâll just have to put up with the inconvenience and move your operation to a computer using a supported browser. You can go through some gyrations to make it work, but frankly, itâs usually easier to simply move computers. By the way, the Universal College Application does not have similar browser limitations or issues. In the event you are experiencing problems with your online application, do not hesitate to contact the various âsupport centers. But whatever you do, donât wait until the last minute. Responses can be significantly delayed depending on traffic to the site. [Republished with permission of Nancy Griesemer. Original article can be found at https://collegeexplorations.blogspot.com/2012/11/its-all-about-print-preview-or-why-your.html] Need assistance with writing a college application essay? Contact The Essay Expert at 608-467-0067 or through our Web Form. Save
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