1. Start Early, Stay Organized
Create a spreadsheet with deadlines, requirements, essay prompts, and recommendation letter requests for each college. Update it regularly to avoid last-minute surprises.
2. Use a “Brag Sheet” for Recommenders
When asking for recommendations, give your teachers or mentors a one-page summary of your achievements, activities, and goals. It’ll help them write a more detailed, personalized letter.
3. Craft a “Core Message”
Think about what you want colleges to remember about you. Are you the creative problem-solver? The resilient athlete? Make sure your essays and activities consistently reflect this theme.
4. Recycle, Don’t Copy-Paste Essays
Many essay prompts are similar. Adapt and personalize your best essays for multiple applications, but always tweak them to fit each school’s specific question and values.
5. Show, Don’t Tell
Instead of saying you’re “hardworking,” tell a quick story that proves it. Anecdotes and specific examples make your application memorable.
6. Use Action Verbs in the Activities List
Start each bullet point in your extracurricular activities with a strong action verb (e.g., “Led,” “Organized,” “Created,” “Initiated”). It makes your experience sound dynamic.
7. Apply “Test Optional” Strategically
If your standardized test scores aren’t a standout part of your application, check if your target schools are test-optional and consider applying without them.
8. Reach Out to Admissions Officers
Send a brief, thoughtful email with a specific question about the college or your application. Demonstrated interest can sometimes tip the scales in your favor.
9. Make Use of Fee Waivers
Application fees add up. If finances are tight, don’t hesitate to request fee waivers—most colleges offer them, and it won’t hurt your chances.
10. Proofread Backwards
After reviewing your essays top-to-bottom, read them backwards (sentence by sentence) to catch typos and awkward phrasing you might miss otherwise.
11. Submit Before the Deadline Rush
Don’t wait until the last hour—websites can crash from traffic, and you’ll be less stressed if you hit “submit” a few days early.
12. Save Everything (Cloud & Offline)
Back up your essays, forms, and important documents in Google Drive or Dropbox—and keep a local copy, just in case.
Bonus Tips for Standing Out
- Include a unique extracurricular, hobby, or side project—even if it seems small, it can set you apart.
- Use LinkedIn to connect with current students or alumni (many are happy to answer questions or offer advice).
- Show genuine excitement for each school—colleges can spot a generic application a mile away.