Friday, August 21, 2020
How Many Colleges Should I Apply to TKG
How Many Colleges Should I Apply to We get this question a lot: how many schools should I be applying to? The answer is a bit different for everyone, but weâre very intentional about the range that we suggest for each person, which is between 8-12. More is not better, in this situation. Itâs just more stress and more work. And at a certain point weâre looking at diminishing returns in terms of essays and overall work quality if youâre applying to 18-20 schools. We know that itâs scary to have fewer schools on the list, but if youâve done everything right leading up to this point, there really should only be 8-12 schools on your list. Why this range? A few reasons. Itâs about fit, not ability.We know youâre smart. We know that you can keep up with the most intense and academically rigorous of environments, but that doesnât necessarily mean that thatâs what you want from your college experience. Remember: this is where youâre going to be spending four years, and once youâre there, basically no one cares that you did or did not get into Princeton. We know itâs hard to ditch your preconceived notions about what the âbestâ schools are and to not approach this process with a âYOLO?!â perspective and apply to every Ivy there is âjust in case,â but weâre telling you that if thatâs your approach, youâre doing it wrong. Schools have different vibes, cultures, and values--theyâre like small towns, or sometimes cities. Make sure youâre applying to the towns and cities where youâd be happy to live and in which youâd thrive, not just the most âpopularâ cities.You should be editing down, not adding on out of fear.As weâve written about before, this process is all about refining, from college lists, to Common App essay, to supplemental essays, to your activities section. While thereâs no possible way to convey the complex human who you are in one application, itâs better to show some restraint, order, and intentionality with your application as oppose d to having it appear like a chaotic Pollock painting of information. Similar to your application, your college list should reflect your research, understanding of various schools, your scores and GPA (and how they fit together), and an understanding of what you want. When we see school lists that have a seemingly random assortment of schools that are different sizes, embody different cultures, and are sort of, well, all over the place, our instinct is to scrap it and start from scratch. Start big, make a list of schools that you genuinely love and would be happy to go to, and edit it down from there. Pay attention to your gut. And donât, we repeat: DONâT add on schools at the last minute out of fear. That will never produce a positive outcome.8-12 allows for balance. We say challenge yourself to narrow your list to 3, 4, and 3, in each category: reach, target, and safety. We like the target category to be a bit bigger than the others because with targets it really could go eit her way and if all goes according to plan, you should get in. Theyâre good bets to take, so we like to bolster that section. More than 3 reaches, and your list gets top-heavy, which isnât good. 3 safeties are your insurance plan. And itâs a solid one. It allows for one or two schools rejecting or deferring you solely because they know you wonât attend. If youâve done your research and realistically understand your profile to be numerically overqualified within the context of accepted students at the schools in this section, then 3 safeties are sufficient. Oh, and....no more than 1 Ivy.** If you are the average overachieving student, this rule applies to you. And by average we mean you have great grades and great scores and great extracurriculars, not that you are a B+ student. So, if you want to put more than one Ivy (we include Stanford, UChicago, Duke, and MIT in the Ivies, by the way) on your list you might be guilty of the aforementioned âYOLO?!â way of thinking. We arenât fans. Each of the Ivies are quite unique in terms of personality, and we rarely think that a student would thrive in more than one of those environments. If youâre finding yourself wanting to apply to more than one Ivy, we implore you to interrogate your opinions on the Ivies and your list in general. Is it because you truly think youâd thrive there? Or is it because youâre feeling like itâs now or never and you like the âideaâ of going to an Ivy? Yeah. No. Thatâs a red flag for us. **There are exceptions to every rule. Call or email us if you need some assistance with the challenging task of narrowing down or completing your school list.
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