Friday, August 21, 2020
What do I do if Im Rejected ED TKG
What do I do if Iâm Rejected ED If youâre reading this in the fall, before youâve heard back from your ED/EA school:This is a great place to be in. Itâs not too late for anything. Start your other supplements today and put just as much work into them as you have into your ED/EA school. Work equally on the array of schools on your listâ"â"safeties, targets, and reaches. To find guidance about how to write the supplements for your schools, poke around the blog. We have dozens of detailed blog posts for supplements (like this one, this one, or this one). In particular, if youâre dealing with schools that ask âWhy ___?â, like this one, you might want to consider working really hard to perfect one of these first. Most of these essays will actually contain similar components. For instance, theyâll talk about what you want to do there as a student and person, what youâll major in and classes youâll take, and how those goals tie into things youâve already done in high school. But they will be tailo red to the specific school and based on the research youâve done about it. Once youâve perfected that one essay, you can move onto a bunch of others because youâll now know how they work and youâll have a strong recipe for completing them. Donât spread yourself too thin and write half-baked responses for each, which you then need to go back, scratch, and start from the beginning. A few extra tips:Move through your supplements methodically, setting deadlines for each.If you get stuck on one, start a new one and circle back in a few days when your ideas have had a bit of time to âpercolate.âTry 15-minute free-writes if you still canât think of what you want to say.If youâre reading this in December and youâve received bad news: First, take a deep breath. This can be a really scary, frustrating, crushing, painful time of the college process. Youâre allowed to feel angry, sad, and worried. Those feelings are all valid. Because at the end of the day, rejection is rejection! No matter how old you are, it definitely doesnât have to feel good. Feel free to take care of yourself in whatever way you need to right now.The main thing to know is that if you donât get into your top early decision or early action school, itâs going to be okay. At the same time, itâs still really important that you start creating your plan of action right now. Maybe the last thing you want to do is go put yourself out there again and take a risk on a handful of other schools, but the bottom line is thatâs what you have to doâ"â"itâs crunch time and you need to do the work for other places right now. Start by approaching your list of schools. Your first choice school isnât a real option after a full rejection, but there are still so many schools out there. What other safeties, targets, and reaches do you have in your college basket? Now ask yourself: am I actually interested in these places now that I know I canât go to X? For some students, it mi ght also feel hard to get riled up about other schools at first, but sometimes deferral or rejection can also spur a newfound excitement about all the other places that might be a great college fit. That ED school doesnât have to be everything: rejection can sometimes even open the door to opportunities and ideas you wouldnât have considered before. Itâs also not too late to nix one place or add another now that you have more information. Just as important as these questions about excitement/interest is making sure youâre being realistic about your list. Sometimes your ED/EA school is a reach but still a school you could have feasibly gotten into, and the rejection doesnât make sense. But in many, many other cases, students use their early option to apply to an out-of-reach school. If thatâs what you did, you will need to approach the Regular Decision process differently and cautiously tailor your new, updated list with this in mind.Once youâve re-finalized your list, spend some time skimming those supplements and researching the necessary information for each one (especially the âWhy ___?â questions!). As we wrote above, we suggest working equally on the array of schools and reading any of our dozens of detailed blog posts that talk about how to write the supplements for those schools. Check out some examples here, here, or here.A few extra tasks and tips: Donât spend the next two weeks on one single supplement. If youâre stuck, try working on another one and circling back to the challenging later.Set yourself deadlines. Believe us when we say that procrastination is not your friend right now.Look back at your Common App essay. It might be annoying or daunting to return to that piece of writing, but most likely youâre not going to start from scratch. Youâre not a new person, after all. Instead, consider printing it out, reading it aloud, and hearing how it sounds to you now. Edit based on that reread.The last major thing to remem ber is to send out your scores to the rest of the schools youâre applying toâ"â"at least 3 weeks ahead of the RD deadline. You can do this online through College Board.Itâs a lot to do in little time. But even reading this post has been a good first step. So stop for a second and take another deep breath. You got this!If youâve been rejected from your early decision choice school and youâre freaking out, reach out to us here. We have a regular decision package (âItâs going to be okayâ) that is specially tailored to support students who werenât admitted to their ED school and need guidance about how to proceed.
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