Should I answer the “optional” essay on my college applications?

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Numerous college applications such as Elon University or College of William and Mary will include questions noted as “optional.”

Elon’s application reads: You may also write an optional personal statement if there is more you would like to tell us about your background or any circumstances that might inform your academic information.

College of William and Mary has this optional essay: Beyond your impressive academic credentials and extracurricular accomplishments, what else makes you unique and colorful?

Does this really mean that you can skip this question? Well, “yes” and “no.”

On the “Yes” side . . .

If you skip this optional question, then it will save you that extra hour that you would have spent writing a response. Instead, you will have an hour to do something that you really enjoy. Senior year is already busy enough without doing “extra” essay prompts on college applications. Right?

On the “No” side . . .

When you see the word “optional” think “opportunity” instead. You may also note on the Common Application that there is an optional section for additional information. When you review your Common Application in its entirety, if there is any information that’s missing or a low grade that needs explaining, then please include that additional information in the optional section. Do you want to have an opportunity to attend that college with the “optional” essay? If your answer is “yes” then that essay prompt is an opportunity to have your voice heard, it is NOT optional.

Get ready Class of 2014 for new changes to the Common Application

The Common Application will change beginning in August 2013. It will be a good change in that the navigation features will make it easier for students to work on their application, modify, and get help when needed.

The uploading features will change, however:

Unlike the old model, the new system will not allow students to upload a résumé, although member colleges can add that option if they choose. In such cases, applicants will still be able to zap a document say, a research paper they wrote to the admissions office, but that transaction will not happen as part of the Common Application. Eventually, the Common Application will have overlapping admissions cycles—starting in August and ending after Labor Day—that run simultaneously. And as of next summer, the Common Application will become an online-only venture so long, paper.

via Meet the New Common Application – Head Count – The Chronicle of Higher Education.

The most exciting change I’ve heard about is that Common App is removing the “Topic of Choice.” Not sure why it was ever included since the other five topics are so broad to begin with. In all the years that I’ve been reviewing the Common App essays with my students, it has been extremely rare to read an essay that qualified for the “Topic of Choice” category. Good riddance to this question!