how to present my scholastic achievements

<p>I have a lot of such achievements but there are only 7 places there.
I have 7 international
and what about the national, regional.</p>

<p>SHould I miss them.
Is there any way to present all achievements</p>

<p>Yes, I also have this question, the format of MIT application has a lot of constraints.</p>

<p>And can I send the resume by post, and other application materials on-line?</p>

<p>I e-mailed them and asked a while ago. They said I could use item 13 to list anything extra.</p>

<p>But i plan to write an essay in part 13
I know another way.
I shall get a recommendation from my math and info club president
and he will write about my achievements in it</p>

<p>Is that a good way</p>

<p>Part #13 is “tell us about something you created”. But there is also part #14, which invited you to attach additional sheets with any info you want. Put your list of awards there. National and international awards are too important to leave them to one of your recommenders to list.</p>

<p>There is a space provided in the online application
I plan to put there an essay.
May I send additional materials by post.</p>

<p>there should be TWO extra, optional spaces - #13 and #14. Are you planning to write TWO extra essays on top of all the required ones? Are you sure you can’t work whatever it is you need to say into one of the other essays?</p>

<p>your concern is not endemic to you – many [if not all] MIT applicants have achieved/participated in many more ways than there are spaces on the application. It’s your challenge to evaluate which ones are the most important to you. This is MIT’s way of asking you, “What is significant to YOU?” I’m sure they would be more impressed if you presented yourself as an active student then if you attached extra pages on activities/achievements that they may even not bother reading. Hope that helps.</p>