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[公告]Wharton Offers Reapplicant Online Feedback Chats

 

For frustrated Wharton applicants who were denied admission and also not chosen in the school’s random selection for an application feedback session, as well as for potential business school reapplicants everywhere hoping to gain insight about how to approach their applications the next time around, there is hope! This year, Wharton will be offering a series of reapplicant online feedback sessions. These sessions are designed to inform business school reapplicants about the process ahead of them and offer tips and advice about how to navigate the upcoming application season.

The dates for these online chats are:

Friday, 11 July, 2008, 10:00 a.m. ET

Tuesday, 29 July, 2008, 5:00 p.m. ET

Monday, 4 August, 2008, 5:00 p.m. ET

To access the chats, those interested should log into Wharton’s student2student discussion board and click on the “chat” tab.

For reapplicants who wish to gain inside tips about the review process but are unable to participate in one of these chats, Wharton offers additional reapplicant information and advice, as well as a discussion board, on their website.

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thanks for your information

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可惜根本点不进去

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学生主持的吗

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很多人反映根本参加不了,估计有technical problem

TOP

这是本次活动大致情况:

Wharton Adcom Hosts Online Chat for Reapplicants

The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School Admissions Committee this morning hosted an online chat directed toward applicants who are applying for a second time for admission to Wharton’s MBA program.

Judith Silverman Hodara, senior associate director and interim co-director of admissions, fielded questions from more than a dozen inquisitive reapplicants during the hour-long chat. Queries covered topics ranging from how a reapplicant is viewed relative to a first-timer to whether answering the same essays used in prior applications is advisable to how to choose your recommenders the second time around.

Hodara’s answers centered around one central theme, namely that the admissions committee wants to see that a reapplicant has thought about the ways in which he or she is different this time around. They want you to demonstrate – through essays, subsequent job growth, etc. – that you are a stronger candidate who will contribute to the Wharton community, she said.

As to recommendations, Hodara said, it is up to you whether to ask new people to submit recommendations or to ask earlier recommenders to update their submissions. If someone new will shed additional light on your application, then ask him or her. But if an earlier recommender can speak to ways you have grown or improved, then he or she would make a good choice as well.

The prior application of a reapplicant is considered by the admissions committee if it was submitted within the past two years. If you applied three or more years ago, though, you are not considered a reapplicant, Hodara wrote, and your prior application will not be reviewed.

In the case of reapplicants, while earlier applications are consulted, much more weight is given to the new application than the earlier one. You can choose to submit answers to the same essay questions you have addressed in earlier applications, but the content should be different, Hodara advised. “I would not resubmit the same answers,” she wrote.

Hodara strongly recommended using the optional essays as a place to explain any changes in your candidacy. If you have decided to change concentrations, for example, elaborate on why.

At the conclusion of the chat, Hodara invited anyone with additional questions about the reapplication process to submit them to her via email at judiths@wharton.upenn.edu.

Two additional online chats addressing reapplicants’ questions have been scheduled for later this summer. They will take place on Tuesday, July 29th, at 5 p.m. ET and Monday, August 4th, at 5 p.m. ET. To learn more, click here.

The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School Admissions Committee this morning hosted an online chat directed toward applicants who are applying for a second time for admission to Wharton’s MBA program.

Judith Silverman Hodara, senior associate director and interim co-director of admissions, fielded questions from more than a dozen inquisitive reapplicants during the hour-long chat. Queries covered topics ranging from how a reapplicant is viewed relative to a first-timer to whether answering the same essays used in prior applications is advisable to how to choose your recommenders the second time around.

Hodara’s answers centered around one central theme, namely that the admissions committee wants to see that a reapplicant has thought about the ways in which he or she is different this time around. They want you to demonstrate – through essays, subsequent job growth, etc. – that you are a stronger candidate who will contribute to the Wharton community, she said.

As to recommendations, Hodara said, it is up to you whether to ask new people to submit recommendations or to ask earlier recommenders to update their submissions. If someone new will shed additional light on your application, then ask him or her. But if an earlier recommender can speak to ways you have grown or improved, then he or she would make a good choice as well.

The prior application of a reapplicant is considered by the admissions committee if it was submitted within the past two years. If you applied three or more years ago, though, you are not considered a reapplicant, Hodara wrote, and your prior application will not be reviewed.

In the case of reapplicants, while earlier applications are consulted, much more weight is given to the new application than the earlier one. You can choose to submit answers to the same essay questions you have addressed in earlier applications, but the content should be different, Hodara advised. “I would not resubmit the same answers,” she wrote.

Hodara strongly recommended using the optional essays as a place to explain any changes in your candidacy. If you have decided to change concentrations, for example, elaborate on why.

At the conclusion of the chat, Hodara invited anyone with additional questions about the reapplication process to submit them to her via email at judiths@wharton.upenn.edu.

Two additional online chats addressing reapplicants’ questions have been scheduled for later this summer. They will take place on Tuesday, July 29th, at 5 p.m. ET and Monday, August 4th, at 5 p.m. ET. To learn more, click here.

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QUOTE:
以下是引用wanders在2008-7-14 17:20:00的发言:

这是本次活动大致情况:

Wharton Adcom Hosts Online Chat for Reapplicants

The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School Admissions Committee this morning hosted an online chat directed toward applicants who are applying for a second time for admission to Wharton’s MBA program.

Judith Silverman Hodara, senior associate director and interim co-director of admissions, fielded questions from more than a dozen inquisitive reapplicants during the hour-long chat. Queries covered topics ranging from how a reapplicant is viewed relative to a first-timer to whether answering the same essays used in prior applications is advisable to how to choose your recommenders the second time around.

Hodara’s answers centered around one central theme, namely that the admissions committee wants to see that a reapplicant has thought about the ways in which he or she is different this time around. They want you to demonstrate – through essays, subsequent job growth, etc. – that you are a stronger candidate who will contribute to the Wharton community, she said.

As to recommendations, Hodara said, it is up to you whether to ask new people to submit recommendations or to ask earlier recommenders to update their submissions. If someone new will shed additional light on your application, then ask him or her. But if an earlier recommender can speak to ways you have grown or improved, then he or she would make a good choice as well.

The prior application of a reapplicant is considered by the admissions committee if it was submitted within the past two years. If you applied three or more years ago, though, you are not considered a reapplicant, Hodara wrote, and your prior application will not be reviewed.

In the case of reapplicants, while earlier applications are consulted, much more weight is given to the new application than the earlier one. You can choose to submit answers to the same essay questions you have addressed in earlier applications, but the content should be different, Hodara advised. “I would not resubmit the same answers,” she wrote.

Hodara strongly recommended using the optional essays as a place to explain any changes in your candidacy. If you have decided to change concentrations, for example, elaborate on why.

At the conclusion of the chat, Hodara invited anyone with additional questions about the reapplication process to submit them to her via email at judiths@wharton.upenn.edu.

Two additional online chats addressing reapplicants’ questions have been scheduled for later this summer. They will take place on Tuesday, July 29th, at 5 p.m. ET and Monday, August 4th, at 5 p.m. ET. To learn more, click here.

The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School Admissions Committee this morning hosted an online chat directed toward applicants who are applying for a second time for admission to Wharton’s MBA program.

Judith Silverman Hodara, senior associate director and interim co-director of admissions, fielded questions from more than a dozen inquisitive reapplicants during the hour-long chat. Queries covered topics ranging from how a reapplicant is viewed relative to a first-timer to whether answering the same essays used in prior applications is advisable to how to choose your recommenders the second time around.

Hodara’s answers centered around one central theme, namely that the admissions committee wants to see that a reapplicant has thought about the ways in which he or she is different this time around. They want you to demonstrate – through essays, subsequent job growth, etc. – that you are a stronger candidate who will contribute to the Wharton community, she said.

As to recommendations, Hodara said, it is up to you whether to ask new people to submit recommendations or to ask earlier recommenders to update their submissions. If someone new will shed additional light on your application, then ask him or her. But if an earlier recommender can speak to ways you have grown or improved, then he or she would make a good choice as well.

The prior application of a reapplicant is considered by the admissions committee if it was submitted within the past two years. If you applied three or more years ago, though, you are not considered a reapplicant, Hodara wrote, and your prior application will not be reviewed.

In the case of reapplicants, while earlier applications are consulted, much more weight is given to the new application than the earlier one. You can choose to submit answers to the same essay questions you have addressed in earlier applications, but the content should be different, Hodara advised. “I would not resubmit the same answers,” she wrote.

Hodara strongly recommended using the optional essays as a place to explain any changes in your candidacy. If you have decided to change concentrations, for example, elaborate on why.

At the conclusion of the chat, Hodara invited anyone with additional questions about the reapplication process to submit them to her via email at judiths@wharton.upenn.edu.

Two additional online chats addressing reapplicants’ questions have been scheduled for later this summer. They will take place on Tuesday, July 29th, at 5 p.m. ET and Monday, August 4th, at 5 p.m. ET. To learn more, click here.

The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School Admissions Committee this morning hosted an online chat directed toward applicants who are applying for a second time for admission to Wharton’s MBA program.

Judith Silverman Hodara, senior associate director and interim co-director of admissions, fielded questions from more than a dozen inquisitive reapplicants during the hour-long chat. Queries covered topics ranging from how a reapplicant is viewed relative to a first-timer to whether answering the same essays used in prior applications is advisable to how to choose your recommenders the second time around.

Hodara’s answers centered around one central theme, namely that the admissions committee wants to see that a reapplicant has thought about the ways in which he or she is different this time around. They want you to demonstrate – through essays, subsequent job growth, etc. – that you are a stronger candidate who will contribute to the Wharton community, she said.

As to recommendations, Hodara said, it is up to you whether to ask new people to submit recommendations or to ask earlier recommenders to update their submissions. If someone new will shed additional light on your application, then ask him or her. But if an earlier recommender can speak to ways you have grown or improved, then he or she would make a good choice as well.

The prior application of a reapplicant is considered by the admissions committee if it was submitted within the past two years. If you applied three or more years ago, though, you are not considered a reapplicant, Hodara wrote, and your prior application will not be reviewed.

In the case of reapplicants, while earlier applications are consulted, much more weight is given to the new application than the earlier one. You can choose to submit answers to the same essay questions you have addressed in earlier applications, but the content should be different, Hodara advised. “I would not resubmit the same answers,” she wrote.

Hodara strongly recommended using the optional essays as a place to explain any changes in your candidacy. If you have decided to change concentrations, for example, elaborate on why.

At the conclusion of the chat, Hodara invited anyone with additional questions about the reapplication process to submit them to her via email at judiths@wharton.upenn.edu.

Two additional online chats addressing reapplicants’ questions have been scheduled for later this summer. They will take place on Tuesday, July 29th, at 5 p.m. ET and Monday, August 4th, at 5 p.m. ET. To learn more, click here.

thanks

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