Taking the Stress out of the College Application Process

Amanda Phew!

Let me tell you how stressed I was when I applied to college.  I had never spent so much time writing, editing, rewriting, having others read, and writing some more.  Those essays nearly caused me to have a breakdown.  I’m sure none of this is news to you.  You’ve all been experiencing the same thing over the last few weeks.  But the best part is that it’s over!  You’re done!

But wait!  What if I don’t get in?  What if I didn’t say everything I should have?  What if the waiting makes me have an even bigger breakdown?!  Take a deep breath.  Not a big deal.  Take Patrick’s advice and calmly look over the application.  If there’s anything you left out then send it along.  If you’ve said everything you wanted to then you need to remember that you’ve done your best and it’s out of your hands.  Relax, stop the stressing.  Push those applications far from your mind and just enjoy your last semester of high school.  Do your homework, hang out with your friends, forget that college exists.  Really, it will help you out.  Trust the girl who panicked endlessly.  In April when the letters start arriving it will be a nice surprise and not a burden that’s been looming over you.  Then you’ll have a fun decision to make!

And then, in another few years, the process will begin over again for graduate school 🙂

Amanda Juriansz
Assistant Director of Community Outreach

Application Reflection

PmaloneyThe Friday before New Year’s Day tends to be a very busy one in the Admissions Office at Holy Cross.  It is the final day for on-campus interviews, so counselors are very busy talking with applicants about their goals, activities, academic interests, etc.  The mail, which does not stop coming during the Christmas vacation, has been held at our campus post office until the office opens after Christmas, and so buckets of mail are delivered on this day.  It’s also a very busy day for the phone.  Students and parents are calling about interviews, about their application, and, if they are Early Decision candidates, are wondering when they will be hearing back from us.  On the other side of things, you students aren’t as busy (that’s why we have so many appointments and phone calls).  I’m not saying it’s a bad thing, but actually good, because it gives you an opportunity to reflect on your college application process.
For many of you, these days allow you to breathe a sigh of relief.  PHEW!  Applications have been completed (or should be soon for you procrastinators), recommendation letters have been sent, papers have been handed in and tests have been taken.  Take advantage of the opportunity to catch your breath and read over your application.  I hope you have saved a copy somewhere!  Start reading with a clear mind and try to imagine that you don’t know whose application you are reading – because in many cases, we haven’t met you before.  Look over those activities that you’ve listed on page 3…what do they say about you?  Turn to page 6 and re-read your personal statement for the 800th time (hopefully)…is it still the best paper you’ve written about yourself?
Most importantly, I want to you think about whether you think that your application shows the reader who you are as a person – you the student, you the musician, you the employee, you the athlete.  When reading an application, we are looking for you to tell us everything about who you are.  The more information we have, the more informed our reading can be.  If you suddenly feel as if you’ve left something out, well, it happens…don’t panic!  Take this time to identify exactly what is missing from your application and try to figure out a way to tell us about it, then send it along.  We’d love to hear more about you!
Patrick Maloney ’02
Assistant Director of Admissions

Happy Holidays!

Kelli I know you’re all dying to go behind the scenes of our “Holiday Card.”   Well here are some of the answers to the thousands of questions that have poured  in. Okay, actually no questions have been to us, but these are my guesses about the questions you are secretly quite curious about:

How did they come up with such a fantastic picture idea?

We threw around a lot of ideas for our holiday photo this year, including a figure skating scene, a scene around the Christmas dinner table, and even something involving us dressed like reindeer.  The photo we finally settled on was Drew’s idea, proposed while we lunched at the fabulous Corner Grille on Pleasant St. (their super thin crust pizza is unbelievably good). I think it won the day primarily because: 1. The idea was cute and 2. Didn’t require a whole production crew to stage it.

How did they get the hat on the statue?

Very carefully.  It had just rained and the statue was quite slick. Nevertheless, Patrick managed the daring feat of placement while wearing dress shoes.

Who is that statue guy?
The statue is entitled, Eustache de Saint Pierre, Vetu, A Burgher of Calais (by Auguste Rodin) and is located in Memorial Plaza.  It depicts Eustache de Saint Pierre, one of six citizens of Calais, France, who surrendered the keys to the city to Edward III during the Hundreds Years War.  In 1347, Dressed in sackcloth and wearing nooses around their necks, the six volunteers walked to the English camp and presented themselves to the king. At the intercession of Edward’s queen the six hostages were spared.

Where can I get one of those fabulous scarves?
Why the HC bookstore of course!  Check the “Headwear/Accessories” category.
http://www.holycross.edu/bookstore/

Img_2462_1 Img_2465_4 Img_2466_5 Img_2467_6

Kelli Powell
Assistant Director of Admissions

Let It Snow

When students and parents visit our lovely campus here in Worcester, the most frequently asked question is, “Do you get sick of climbing all those stairs?”

Then answer is, of course, “No – half the time we get to go down stairs.”

The second most frequently asked question is, “What about when it snows?  Do they shovel the pathways and stairs?”  (Yes, I know that’s actually two questions.)

I always explain to these students and parents that there is no doubt in anyone’s mind that we have the finest facilities and grounds crew in the country and they take a particular pride in maintaining the school’s walkways during the winter.

Recently here in the Northeast, we received our fair share of snow.  Last Thursday  evening we received about 11 inches of snow on top of 5 inches already on the ground.  The snow fall finally stopped around 1:00 a.m.  I arrived at work the next morning at 6:45 a.m. and as I walked to my office, I took two pictures (see below) — one to provide evidence of all the snow we received, the second to show just one example of a staircase on our campus that had been meticulously and lovingly cleaned while students slept all snug in their bed.

So to our amazing staff on campus I offer a heartfelt “thanks” and to the skies above I say, “LET IT SNOW!”

(and yes, it is snowing as I type this on Thursday morning . . . )

Straight_stairs_2

Mem_plaza

Common Application Supplement

Drew You’ve worked four long years in high school – history term papers, trig exams, chemistry labs, art projects, summer reading quizzes – and then finally, senior year, you tackle the Common Application.  You write your name, address, mom’s name, dad’s name, high school’s name, etc.  Then it’s time for the short answer – you rack your brain for an experience, an activity that you can talk about in 150 words or fewer that will be impressive to the admissions officer and reflective of your interests.  And then, the final push, you sit down to write the essay.  But someone gave you good advice, so you listen to your sparrow and write an essay of which you feel proud.

You click “SUBMIT”.

Phew.

In school the next day, you feel invigorated, relieved that the application is done.  You’ve regained the pep in your step.  In the hallway on the way to first period, you tell a friend that you finally submitted your application to College X.

“Did you finish the supplement?” your friend replies.

“Supplement?  There’s a supplement?  AAAARRRRGGGGHHHH!!!!”

When will it ever be enough?

The Admissions Office at Holy Cross is here to say that you’ve done enough.  We do not require a supplement to the Common Application.  We know you’ve worked hard in high school and we don’t need you to prove anything else nor write any more essays.  We congratulate you on getting this far in your senior year.

Click “SUBMIT”.

Feel the relief.

Andrew N Carter
Associate Director of Admissions

Is My Recommendation Letter There Yet?

Pmaloney Dear Holy Cross Admissions,

I recently applied to the College of the Holy Cross and I’m very excited!  However, I sent my application online through the Common Application website and the rest of my information (recommendations, report card, etc.) is coming through the mail.  I want to make sure that everything arrives okay.  Can you tell me if you have all of my information and if my application is complete?

Thank you.

Sincerely,
“Concerned Applicant”

I chose to start my blog this week with a generic version of the email/phone call above that starts to become more frequent this time of year.especially for students who have applied Early Decision.  There is a somewhat easy answer for this question, but the explanation is a little difficult (I think) for people outside of our office to visualize.  So, through the mighty power of the Admissions blog, I’m going to show you the answer.

The first step in the process is obviously the delivery of mail to our office.  Because of the sheer volume of mail that we are consistently receiving, we are one of the first departments on campus to receive our daily mail.  Patricia McKeen, who many of you will recognize as one of our two wonderful receptionists, is our postal worker extraordinare.  Actually, she works for us, but I would argue that she should receive some kind of compensation for the Postal Service for the job that she does.  As you can see by the photo, Pat opens ALL of the mail.  I can’t even begin to fathom how she does it.  But if you sent in your application via mail and received a postcard from us saying that we received it, well, Pat McKeen opened that envelope and sent you that postcard.  Seriously, look at the piles of mail in the photo!  Not only does she open it, but then she sorts it all alphabetically.  Amazing!

20070924071_2

Next stop is our file room (sometimes called Fort Knox).  This is the real guts of the Admissions Office.  We have several wonderful clerical staff members in the file room, who receive all the mail that Pat has just worked on.  At this point, they take all of the recommendation letters, transcripts, resumés, etc. and go through the filing cabinets that hold all your applications to put them with all of the information we’ve received from you already.  Then, we check to see what kind of information it is that you’ve sent us.  If it is a required piece of the application process, a box is checked off on the front of your application file, so that anyone looking at your file doesn’t need to flip through all of the pages to see that your guidance counselor recommendation arrived last week.  This information is also stored in our computer system so that any required information that wasn’t received from you is recorded and we would eventually send you a letter notifying you which required items are missing.  Each counselor on the staff here has their own filing cabinet or section of filing cabinet divided by alphabet.  That way, we are able to keep track of all of “our” applications as they being to accumulate.

Anyway, getting back to the email/phone call at the beginning of this entry, if you did send us something and are wondering if it arrived, now you know the process that it went through to get to the rest of your application file.  However, as you can see, there are several steps involved and with the volume of mail (especially after a few days build up around Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day) it does take some time for things to get where they need to be.  But remember: You don’t have to worry.  We’ve been doing this a long time.  Your recommendation letters are safe and are in capable hands.  And if anything happened to a letter and it did not make it to your file, we’ll send you a letter to let you know.  You don’t have to email or call to check in on it.

Oh, and if you see Pat McKeen or any other member of the Admissions clerical staff around campus sometime in the future, make sure you thank them for their hard work and all of those paper cuts they got from working with all of your mail!

Patrick Maloney ’02
Assistant Director of Admissions

Procrastination–Your “Frenemy”

Kelli

Procrastination is not your friend, though I’m sure for many of you it is whispering around your consciousness these days.  “Why do something today that you can put off till tomorrow?”  “It’s the holiday season and there are so many more interesting things than college application stuff that you could be doing.” “Really, you do your best work at the last minute.”  It would be very easy to give in to the college process fatigue that is probably assailing you right about now.

Don’t listen.  Ignore the temptation.  We’re in the homestretch and now is not the time to falter.  Whether you got out of the gate fast or are slow starter, it’s time to throw it into fifth gear and finish up all the things left unchecked on your to do list.  Finish up that final revision of your college essay.  Schedule that interview.  Follow up on those teacher recommendations.  Click “send” on that application.

Procrastination is truly not your friend.  At best it is a “frenemy” (an enemy disguised as a friend).  Don’t let it tempt you into putting yourself between a rock and a day-before-the-deadline-last-minute-allnighter-application scramble.  Real friends don’t that to each other. Rather take the advice of someone who was a friend to us all (Benjamin Franklin of course!)—“You may delay, but time will not.”  Or take the advice of Olin Miller, someone whose claim to fame seems to be that he just wrote a lot of quotes (but, probably was also pretty friendly)—“If you want to make an easy job seem mighty hard, just keep putting off doing it.”

Don’t try this at home kids.

20070924073_crop 20070924074_crop

Okay, seriously, stop reading this blog and get back to work!

20070924075_crop

Kelli Powell
Admissions Counselor

The $50 Experiment

Allison I have a 3.5 unweighted GPA, am currently taking 2 AP courses, am a two sport athlete, member of NHS, and scored a 1280 on my SAT’s.  Is it worth it to apply?

We get a lot of questions from concerned high school seniors who are having trouble deciding if it’s worth it to apply to Holy Cross.  They rattle off their statistics and a laundry list of extracurricular activities and hope we can give them a sense of where they might stand in our applicant pool.  Unfortunately, our job is not that simple.  Making an admissions decision is not an exact science.  There is no secret equation which guarantees admission (oh, how I wish there were!)  Students (and parents) who ask this what-are-my-chances type question are probably frustrated by the admissions counselor’s vague answer.  Since there are so many variables that change from year to year—the relative strength/weakness of our applicant pool, the institutional needs of the college, the geographic, ethnic, gender breakdown of the current student body etc.—it is difficult for us to gauge a student’s chances when given only a small sampling of their academic record.  Additionally, we need to understand your high school, so that we can place you within the appropriate context.  Because our approach to evaluating students is holistic and we truly value every part of the application, a brief sound byte such as that above does not give us adequate information about you.  It is only when we have your entire application complete that we can begin to get to know you as an individual and determine whether or not Holy Cross is a good fit for you.

So should you apply, or not?  You’re the only one who can answer that.  If you think you have consistently pursued a challenging curriculum, are happy with the grades you have achieved in those classes, have given back to your high school community, and consider yourself an intellectually curious citizen of the world, then go for it!  After all, at the very least you can consider this a “$50 experiment” (perhaps a secret experiment between you and us) and prevent yourself from a life of wondering if you could’ve gotten in…

Keeping Your Hands on the Wheel

JuliaAwhile back I found myself in a gloriously gold rented Impala on the Mass Pike, west of Springfield, headed toward the New York state line.  It was just one of those days: fake blue sky, fiery leaves, twinkling sun, me pretending I can sing like Bob Dylan – the whole nine.

It also happened to be the last day of October, quota-filling frenzy day for state cops. Western mass’s unpredictable downhills and traffic-free highways were making it difficult for me to sustain my careful 72 in the 65 mph zone, and I slowly became frustrated by the attention my speed maintenance was requiring. After all, it was taking away from all the foliage-viewing and loud-singing I had on my schedule.

To remedy the situation, I considered, for maybe the first time in my life, setting the cruise control.

I scrapped the idea about five seconds later.

My thinking was this:  My hands are on my wheel, I am driving this car.  This is my experience, not the Impala’s.

This decidedly lame analogy is leading up to one anti-climactic piece of advice:   As you go through the college search-and-destroy process, make sure to keep your hands on the wheel.  By this I mean two things:

  1. Try not to place too much importance on other people’s opinions.
  2. Work on trusting your own beautiful instincts.

Many of you are blessed with guide book –toting parents, schlepping you from college tour to college tour, quite certain that their idea of your perfect collegiate experience precisely reflects your idea of the perfect collegiate experience.

And don’t get me wrong, your parents/guardians are great (the Holy Cross Admissions team LOVES parents).  Your parents are so great that many of them are financing much of your postsecondary education. They’ve also souped you up with great features; and made sure you’ve passed all your inspections.  But they’re not the ones driving.

Consider them your GPS navigation system, attempting to steer you in the right direction.  But (as many of us have learned the hard way) the GPS is not always right.  Sometimes, it’ll direct you into a lake. That’s when your instincts can be rather beneficial.  When your hands are on the wheel, you are the song that’s playing, you are the one that follows the sign to the farm stand. You are the cloud watcher, the photographer, the ice cream seeker.   Your parents might tell you how to get to the ice cream shop, but you order cookies n’ cream because your taste buds told you it’s delicious.

So keep your hands on the wheel.  Pay attention to your gut when you take that campus tour.   Ignore the gossip. Ignore the hype. Hone in on your pitter-patter. If a school feels right to you, it probably feels right for a reason.

Julia Sanders
Admissions Counselor