bbtitle]
» CC HOME » FORUM HOME

Go Back   College Confidential > College Admissions and Search > Ivy League > Harvard University
New User

Welcome to College Confidential, the leading college-bound community on the Web!
 
Here you'll find hundreds of pages of articles about choosing a college, getting into the college you want, how to pay for it, and much more. You'll also find the Web's busiest discussion community related to college admissions, and our College Visits section!

You are currently viewing the site as a guest.
Registration is simple and easy, and provides full site access.

Join our FREE community:

  • Post and reply to topics
  • Talk privately with other members
  • Participate in polls
  • View less ads
  • Remove this welcome message

 REGISTER NOW

Discussion Menu
»Discussion Home
»Help & Rules
»Latest Posts
»NEW! College Visits
»NEW! Stats Profiles
Top Forums
»College Search
»College Admissions
»Financial Aid
»SAT/ACT
»Parents
»Colleges
»Ivy League
Main CC Site
»College Confidential
»College Search
»College Admissions
»Paying for College
Sponsors
CC Resources for Harvard University
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 11-13-2008, 11:29 PM   #1
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 90
A fun little experiment with essay length

I see a lot of threads about people worrying about the length of their essay.

How can we figure out how much essay length matters?

For my stats class I thought it might be interesting to take a survey to find out if there's any correlation between essay length and acceptance into Harvard. There's probably not, and there will probably be too many lurking variables, but maybe this can give people insight into to effect of the actual length of an essay.

Anyone who feels like participating, please indicate which range your essay length falls into, and whether you were accepted, rejected, or waitlisted. We can keep a running tally, so at the end it might look like this

<400, 0 accepted, 3 rejected
400-500, 8 accepted, 15 rejected
500-600, 12 accepted, 30 rejected
600-700, 13 accepted, 50 rejected
700-800, 10 accepted, 45 rejected
>800, 5 accepted, 25 rejected

Of course those are just arbitrary numbers.

And don't worry, I'm not trying to beat the system and figure out which essay length yields the highest acceptance rate, if any. My app is already in anyway.
thestever is offline   Reply   
Old 11-14-2008, 12:37 AM   #2
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: jersey
Posts: 628
Your sampling pool might be a little skewed. It is CC, after all.
sevitagen is offline   Reply   
Old 11-14-2008, 05:12 PM   #3
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: near New York City
Posts: 6,692
My son was accepted two years ago. His essay was a little short of 500 words.
mathmom is offline   Reply   
Old 11-15-2008, 09:16 AM   #4
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 637
Don't forget about confounding/lurking variables: if the essay was fantabulous, it didn't really matter about the length.
cafesimone is offline   Reply   
Old 11-15-2008, 10:22 AM   #5
Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 500
if it's too long the reader might chuck it. I think a great essay with 500-700 words is accepted. A good essay with 1500 words is rejected. But then there's the actual application...
chinnychinchang is offline   Reply   
Reply

Bookmarks

Tags
essay, statistics

Thread Tools



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:07 AM.


Copyright 2001-2009, Hobsons, Inc., All Rights Reserved