Friday, August 21, 2020
Blog Archive MBA Admissions Myths Destroyed I Have No Real Options
Blog Archive MBA Admissions Myths Destroyed I Have No Real Options In the late 2000s, Harvard Business School (HBS) made a change to its application essay questions that surprised many. Its previously mandatory âlong- and short-term goalsâ essay prompt changed its focus more broadly to âcareer visionâ and became one of four topic choices from which applicants could select two. Immediately, MBA candidates tried to read between the lines and decipher HBSâs hidden agenda behind the change. As a result, many perplexed applicants called us, asking, âEvery other school asks about goals, so HBS must want to know about them, too. I need to answer the essay question option about career vision, right?â This question, in turn, compelled us to ask rhetorically: Why would HBS make a question an option if the admissions committee expected you to answer it? If it did, why would the school not simply designate the question as mandatory, as it had been previously? We believe that in this case, HBS made the question an option because the admissions committee did not feel that applicants must have a definite career vision to be admitted. Essentially, HBS was saying, âIf you have a well-defined career vision that would help us better understand who you are as a candidate, tell us about it. If not, we would love to hear something else that is interesting about you.â Note that HBS no longer poses this particular essay question, but we offer it here as a way of illustrating how candidates can sometimes overthink or misinterpret the âoptionalâ elements of a schoolâs application. Essay options are just that: options. None of HBSâs essay choicesâ"or those of any other MBA programâ"are necessarily ârightâ or âwrong.â The admissions committees are not trying to trick you, nor does a secret answer exist that will guarantee your acceptance. The programs offer multiple essay question options because they know that each applicant is different, and they want to provide an opportunity for each candidate to tell his/her unique story. So, as you approach your essays, focus on what you want to sayâ"not what you think the admissions committee wants to hear. Share ThisTweet Admissions Myths Destroyed Blog Archive MBA Admissions Myths Destroyed I Have No Real Options In the late 2000s, Harvard Business School (HBS) made a change to its application essay questions that surprised many. Its previously mandatory âlong- and short-term goalsâ essay prompt changed its focus more broadly to âcareer visionâ and became one of four topic choices from which applicants could select two. Immediately, MBA candidates tried to read between the lines and decipher HBSâs hidden agenda behind the change. As a result, many perplexed applicants called us, asking, âEvery other school asks about goals, so HBS must want to know about them, too. I need to answer the essay question option about career vision, right?â This question, in turn, compelled us to ask rhetorically: Why would HBS make a question an option if the admissions committee expected you to answer it? If it did, why would the school not simply designate the question as mandatory, as it had been previously? We believe that in this case, HBS made the question an option because the admissions committee did not feel that applicants must have a definite career vision to be admitted. Essentially, HBS was saying, âIf you have a well-defined career vision that would help us better understand who you are as a candidate, tell us about it. If not, we would love to hear something else that is interesting about you.â Note that HBS no longer poses this particular essay question, but we offer it here as a way of illustrating how candidates can sometimes overthink or misinterpret the âoptionalâ elements of a schoolâs application. Essay options are just that: options. None of HBSâs essay choicesâ"or those of any other MBA programâ"are necessarily ârightâ or âwrong.â The admissions committees are not trying to trick you, nor does a secret answer exist that will guarantee your acceptance. The programs offer multiple essay question options because they know that each applicant is different, and they want to provide an opportunity for each candidate to tell his/her unique story. So, as you approach your essays, focus on what you want to sayâ"not what you think the admissions committee wants to hear. Share ThisTweet Admissions Myths Destroyed Blog Archive MBA Admissions Myths Destroyed I Have No Real Options In the late 2000s, Harvard Business School (HBS) made a change to its application essay questions that surprised many. Its previously mandatory âlong- and short-term goalsâ essay prompt changed its focus more broadly to âcareer visionâ and became one of four topic choices from which applicants could select two. Immediately, MBA candidates tried to read between the lines and decipher HBSâs hidden agenda behind the change. As a result, many perplexed applicants called us, asking, âEvery other school asks about goals, so HBS must want to know about them, too. I need to answer the essay question option about career vision, right?â This question, in turn, compelled us to ask rhetorically: Why would HBS make a question an option if the admissions committee expected you to answer it? If it did, why would the school not simply designate the question as mandatory, as it had been previously? We believe that in this case, HBS made the question an option because the admissions committee did not feel that applicants must have a definite career vision to be admitted. Essentially, HBS was saying, âIf you have a well-defined career vision that would help us better understand who you are as a candidate, tell us about it. If not, we would love to hear something else that is interesting about you.â Note that HBS no longer poses this particular essay question, but we offer it here as a way of illustrating how candidates can sometimes overthink or misinterpret the âoptionalâ elements of a schoolâs application. Essay options are just that: options. None of HBSâs essay choicesâ"or those of any other MBA programâ"are necessarily ârightâ or âwrong.â The admissions committees are not trying to trick you, nor does a secret answer exist that will guarantee your acceptance. The programs offer multiple essay question options because they know that each applicant is different, and they want to provide an opportunity for each candidate to tell his/her unique story. So, as you approach your essays, focus on what you want to sayâ"not what you think the admissions committee wants to hear. Share ThisTweet Admissions Myths Destroyed
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