Top 3 Tips for Common App Prompt 1

The first Common App question reads as follows: “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.”

This prompt will resonate with many students and, when done correctly, offers the admissions officer a wonderful glimpse into a major component of who you are. We strongly believe that you should focus first and foremost on identifying your best story, then craft it to the most appropriate prompt. If you are sure want to respond to this question, we’ve got some tips you should keep in mind before you get too deep into the writing process.

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Is This a Bad Topic?

The personal statement has always been a major element of the admissions process; however, with a number of colleges and universities adopting test optional policies (not to mention how many students have experienced disruption from their norm over the last couple of years), the main essay has become even more important.

We spend the lion’s share of our time helping students craft moving, persuasive essays that highlight their character and accomplishments. Executed well, your essay can help turn a good application into a great one.

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Post-COVID Summer Tips

After over two years of pandemic-related restrictions, we are finally entering a time when the world is largely open for in-person experiences again. For many of you, this is a welcome relief as you approach college application season. It expands your opportunities to jumpstart your process by engaging in meaningful experiences that weren’t possible last summer.

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Last Minute Regular Decision Reminders

As the regular decision deadlines approach (not to mention winter vacation!) we know you’re in the throes of finalizing your applications. Perhaps your main essay is complete but you’re still working on supplements, or vice versa. Maybe you’re done completely. If so, congratulations! Stop reading here.

For the rest of you, we’re wishing you good luck and clarity as you sprint toward the finish line. Remember the tips below and you’ll be sure to submit the strongest applications you’re capable of.

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Wise World Prep
What Your School Profile Reveals About You

We know you’ve been working hard on your applications and are acutely aware that there are many, many individual components that go into completing that process. Essays, test scores, activity lists, recommendation letters, casual correspondence, and other elements all require your thoughtful attention.

But there is an often-overlooked piece of your admissions puzzle that helps the person reading your file see the clearest picture of you. That piece is the school profile. Every high school is required to update this document regularly and submit it with every transcript that goes out on your behalf.

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Do You Need Extra Letters of Recommendation?

By now you’ve asked your teachers and your guidance counselor for letters of recommendation. Hopefully they said yes without any hesitation!

As you send off your first early applications to those dream schools on your list, you may be thinking “Have I done enough? Is there anything else I should have said or included?”

This is a normal feeling for this point in the process. In most cases, all that is left to do is continue to thrive in the classroom and in your extracurricular pursuits while you wait for news. But for some students it may be worth soliciting an additional letter of recommendation, illuminating some of the ways you’ve excelled that haven’t been already covered in your application.

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What Make “Good” Extracurricular Activities?

We hear this question often from students starting out the process. But having a firm sense of which activities impress admissions officers can help current seniors order their activity list and prioritize their time this semester as well. Wherever you are in your process, we’re sure you’ve thought about this.

There’s just one little catch: no activity is inherently better than another. YOU ascribe value to your activities by how you engage in them and how well you write about them. With that said, what makes an activity likely to be beneficial to your application? Make sure it falls into one of the four categories below.

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Why Every Piece of Writing Matters to Your Chances of Admission

Your college application is like a multilayered cake, each level representing another delicious aspect of who you are as a person. The flavors and textures must all work together to create a winning combination.

Similarly, the components of your application – essays, activities list, letters of recommendation, and even informal communications – must all work together to tell a cohesive and compelling story. If one or more of them is out of balance with the others, admissions officers will have a difficult time assessing who you really are as an applicant.

Let’s take a closer look at how these four elements work together to tell your story and why that matters to your admissions chances.

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The Best and Worst Verbs to Use in Your Activity List

How do you spend your time?

This seems like a simple question until you have to try to explain it to someone else. When you start getting into the details, definitions and descriptions often become more vague or murky.

In describing why you’re a great fit for their college, admissions officers want to paint the fullest picture of you possible. Diving beneath the surface level of what you do and uncovering the substance beneath it will help your story appear more vibrant and compelling to the person who reads your activity list.

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When the ED Advantage Isn’t Worth It

This is not a spoiler: applying early decision will increase your odds of admission compared to applying regular decision. Some universities admit upwards of 50% of their class through the ED round.

While the standards aren’t necessarily lower, the smaller applicant pool coupled with the added assurance that, if admitted, you will attend allows admissions officers to shape the class in specific ways. They are seeking to create a student body that represents the intellectual and personal diversity conducive to the best learning and living experience possible.

But early decision, especially round 1 (which typically has a deadline of either November 1 or November 15), is not right for everyone. In some cases, it can do more harm than good. Not being able to showcase your best self in your application would nullify whatever statistical advantage you’d gain from applying early.

So, when in the ED advantage not worth it? Read on to find out.

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How to Supercharge Your Common App Activity List

Your application is only as strong as its weakest point. Every piece of writing you do, every material you submit contributes to the story of who you are that gets interpreted by an admissions officer who, in all likelihood, has not met you.

It is both expected and understandable that you will dedicate significant time to fine-tuning your essays; but many students neglect to put the same attention into other parts of the process, like the activity list. This is a potentially costly mistake.

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Wise World Prep
The Perfection Trap

By now you’ve likely thought of the stories you want to tell in your personal statement and supplements and hopefully you’ve been working diligently to bring those stories to life. For many students, writing strong application essays is a frustrating experience; but it doesn’t have to be.

The pressure to create the perfect essay will make your experience much more painful than necessary and may prevent you from doing your best work. Perfection is a trap. Avoid it at all costs!

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Wise World Prep
So, You Already Have a Dream School… Now What?

It’s common for students to struggle narrowing down the thousands of great colleges and universities in this country into a well-crafted and personally fulfilling application list. Especially for those who haven’t been able to visit many campuses – a normally relatively simple step in the process – the idea of choosing a favorite may feel daunting.

On the other side of this equation, however, are students who know (as sure as any 17 or 18-year old can know) exactly where they want to attend. They may have been dreaming of that college for years already or had a recent experience that propelled it to the top of the list. If this second category sounds more like you, this is the perfect time in the process to check in on those feelings.

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4 Ways You Can Stand Out from your School Group

Unless you are homeschooled by yourself, there’s a strong chance that someone else in your high school class will apply to some of the same colleges as you. In fact, there are probably a few institutions so popular at your high school that every year dozens of students apply.

If you find yourself drawn to a school where many of your friends or peers are also interested, you may feel increased pressure to set yourself apart from everyone else but not know how to go about doing that. With only so many extracurricular opportunities and GPAs within a few tenths of a point to each other, how can students in similar situations differentiate themselves?

Below are four of our strongest ideas on how to do just that!

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Wise World Prep
How to Avoid Burning Out

Whoever was first to say, “the struggle is real” was probably trying to write an amazing college essay in between assignments for multiple AP classes and learning lines for the fall drama while training for varsity soccer.

Senior year can feel overwhelming for students who are facing enormous pressure about their future while trying to finish their present commitments strongly. There is a lot to do!

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Tips for Returning to the Actual Classroom

We are excited for all the wonderful possibilities that the new school year brings with it. For some of you, this will mark the return to in-person learning. You’ve already been adjusting to a new normal and, as we continue the slow progression toward post-pandemic life, we have a few pointers to help make that transition as smooth as possible.

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Wise World Prep
Hidden Gems in the South

Vanderbilt. Duke. The University of Virginia. The southern part of the United States is full of fantastic institutions of higher learning. We’re guessing you’ve heard of the three we mentioned above. (And there’s a strong chance at least one of them is on your list.)

As you build out your college list, however, we hope you’ll take time to consider schools that you may know less about initially or that may not have a national headline-grabbing sports team. Within their campuses and programs may be exactly what you’re really looking for.

Below are four more schools we think are worth further investigation if you think you may want to attend college in the South.

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Wise World Prep
Let’s Talk About Grades…

As many of you prepare to return to a normalized semester, there’s a lot of lost time you may be tempted to make up for. You’ll want to reestablish your friendships and extracurricular involvements, and we encourage you to dive in. But keep in mind that your classroom performance will play a major role in determining how you are read as an applicant.

Some seniors are under the mistaken notion that 12th grade grades don’t matter. This could not be further from the truth! Especially in light of the number of schools moving to test-optional policies, your grades take on an even added role in the admissions process. (And they were already at the top of the list!) Specifically, schools are interested in who you are as a student in a classroom environment. Hopefully online learning will only be a supplement to your experience moving forward. Whether or not you enjoyed virtual classes, now is your time to demonstrate what you’re capable of.

Let’s take a deeper dive.

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