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The Ivy Stone

Judith Silverman Hodara, EdD. has been an admissions professional at the University of Pennsylvania since 1990. Her passion for working with students and their families has been a motivating factor in her work at the University of Pennsylvania, where she serves as a Senior Associate Director of Admissions for the Wharton School of Business. She is the Founder of IvyStone Educational Consulting ( www.ivystonegroup.com)

Upon graduating with a B.A. in English from the University of Pennsylvania, Judith recruited both domestically and internationally as an Associate Director of Admissions for Penn (1990-1997). Learning the process from the inside out, she has helped more than 10,000 students successfully navigate the competitive application process. She has also served as Director of Admission at the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania, and as the Director of Academic Affairs for the Rothberg School at Hebrew University. Her work in graduate education enables her to bring long-range insights to her client's college choices.

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College Application Don'ts

When dealing with essays and interviews, stay away from this

INTERVIEW DON’TS

- Don’t wear inappropriate clothing, chew gum, or show up late. Your presentation shows that you take the interview seriously.

- Don’t tell stories about crazy behavior, or swear.

- Don’t forget to ask questions—interviews are a two-way street and you will not seem “engaged” if you do not ask a few things in return.

- Don’t worry about being perfect, or about being a perfect package—you do not know what a school or an interviewer wants. Frankly, “perfect” interviews with too-practiced answers are boring and seem fake.

- Don’t forget that you are only in high school. Relax—you are not expected to have all the answers or to have already solved world problems.

ESSAY WRITING DON’TS

- Don’t write what you think a committee wants to hear. The more you try to craft something for them, the more it will fall flat. You never know who will be reading your application or what they are seeking. They just want to know what makes you tick. There are very few topics a reader has not seen, so just be yourself!

- Don’t write in a style that is not yours. The essay should reflect your personality. It is disappointing to see an essay written in a severe and formal style from someone who is clearly known for a sense of humor. On the flip side, an essay should not be an attempt to entertain the reader, but if you are more casual, you can be a bit relaxed (with proper grammar and language). But please do not attempt humor if you are a serious person; it is
simply painful to read.

- Don’t have someone else write it. A committee knows when something sounds “wrong” in an essay because they read thousands of essays a year. There are also testing data and grades for English in the application, so if the writing is very different from those indicators, a reader will know something is fishy. Do not make this mistake and lose your chance of admission.

- Don’t vastly exceed page limits or word limits. A well-written essay can say everything you want or need in the limits of the essay. If you cannot seem to write close to those limits, you are likely going off-topic or talking about unnecessary things. An essay should be about a small, focused thing—not a broad discussion—and this should be kept to about a page or two.

- Don’t play with margins and fonts to squeeze in more. What you are doing is obvious, and if you happen to be the 30th application of the day for the reader and your font is small, it is not fun.
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