If you think it feels like the January application deadlines are approaching at the speed of light, you鈥檙e not alone. High school seniors are scrambling to wrap things up by perfecting their essays and securing glowing letters of recommendation during their winter breaks.
Students applying to several different schools often turn to the Common Application in hopes of simplifying the undeniably stressful college application process.
Instead of filling out separate applications for each potential college, hopeful undergraduates can submit the to participating colleges and universities. Established in 1975 by 15 private colleges that wanted to provide a standardized undergraduate application, the Common Application is now accepted by over 400 schools across the United States.
Rob Killion, executive director of the Common Application, says it鈥檚 been estimated that 1.9 million versions of the document will be submitted for the 2011 freshman class鈥攁n impressive increase of 27 percent since last year. More and more students may be taking advantage of the online form because it鈥檚 supposed to help smooth out the procedure of applying to multiple colleges, but an irritating technical glitch is frustrating countless applicants.
Answers to short essay questions can be up to 150 words in length, but the online version of the Common Application is causing headaches for most students. Students are prompted to perform a 鈥減rint preview鈥 of their answers to view the actual version a college admissions officer would see, as opposed to the version the student sees where their response was typed in on their own monitor. Most students鈥 responses are being cut off at the margins, mid-sentence or mid-word, even if the responses are under the 150-word limit.
The issue is not occurring exclusively in the short essay section鈥攕ome applicants have noticed that the form is cutting off parts of their parents鈥 job titles or even details of their own extracurricular activities鈥攂ut the essay response problem has caused quite a stir in the media.
According to the executive director Killion admits that the problem, or 鈥渢runcation,鈥 as it is known within the Common Application offices, has existed for more than a decade without causing much concern.
This fall, though, so many students, parents and counselors complained about the issue that the Common Application recently embedded a link to a warning box within the form.
鈥淚t is critical that you preview your Common App and check for truncated information. If you preview the Common App and find some of your text is missing, you should attempt to shorten your response to fit within the available space,鈥 it warns students.
Thanks to the Common Application glitch, applicants are no longer guaranteed 150 words to respond to questions which might affect their college acceptance. Instead, they have something closer to 1,000 characters because some letters take up more space than others.
鈥淎 capital W takes up 10 times the space of a period,鈥 Killion explains. 鈥淚f a student writes 163 characters that include lots of Ws and m鈥檚 and g鈥檚 and capital letters, their 163 characters are going to take many more inches of space than someone who uses lots of I鈥檚 and commas and periods and spaces.鈥
Essentially, students are being forced to use abbreviations in order to get their point across in the allotted space. 鈥淏elieve me, if there鈥檚 a way to do it, we鈥檇 do it. Maybe there鈥檚 a way out there we don鈥檛 know about,鈥 was Killion鈥檚 answer when asked why the problem has yet to be corrected.
vice president and dean of admissions at Pomona College in Claremont, California, points out that one year ago standardization required that Taiwan be identified in the Common Application as a province of China, not as 鈥淭aiwan, Republic of China.鈥 That 鈥渦nfixable鈥 designation 鈥 and politically problematic label and drop-down box 鈥 was fixed within weeks.
Audrey Kahane, an independent college counselor, that students give themselves more than enough time to fill out college applications. Rushing at the last minute will only cause bigger problems. Be sure to have someone proofread your Common Application before clicking the 鈥淪ubmit鈥 button, because once the Common Application has been submitted to a college it cannot be altered or resubmitted.
helps soften the blow of the annoying Common Application glitch by informing readers that some college officials know about the problem and don’t penalize prospective students for it.
鈥淚n a nutshell, I would empathize with students鈥 frustration. A truncated essay is not going to be the end-all, be-all of an admissions decision,鈥 said NYU鈥檚 Shawn Abbott.
Melissa Rhone earned her Bachelor of Music in Education from the University of Tampa. She resides in the Tampa Bay area and enjoys writing about college, pop culture, and epilepsy awareness.