<p>The school a student attends is definitely factored in when an application is reviewed, as the Admissions committee reviews each individual applicant based on the opportunities that were available to them during their high school years. What does not matter is the decision that a student chooses to attend one high over another. </p>
<p>Kulakai
</p>
<p>I do not work for the Carey School of Business. They are a completely separate institution. You need to contact them directly for assistance: [Johns</a> Hopkins Carey Business School Home](<a href=âhttp://carey.jhu.edu/]Johnsâ>http://carey.jhu.edu/)</p>
<p>Admissionsdaniel: test scores, course selection, course rigor, grade trends, class rank, etc. GPA definitely matters!!! </p>
<ol>
<li>How could you notice âgrade trendsâ? Should student mention her up-treand in her essay or somewhere?</li>
<li>How do you consider âgrade treandsâ, can you give me a little bit more details please, like a example? My Dâs 9th grade GPA pulls her total GPA a lot, I am kind of worried if her total GPA is lower than an average number (whatever it means), you just simply reject her without looking at other factors.
thanks.</li>
</ol>
<ol>
<li><p>We notice grade trends because we examine the entire transcript 9th grade through mid-year of 12th grade. We can see each grade a student has received, each year, in each subject. We can see overall trends and also trends in individual subjects. </p></li>
<li><p>Total GPA is a statistic only. Our decisions are made through a thorough evaluation of the applicantâs high school transcript. A combined GPA tells us very little about the applicant. Our role is to evaluate all parts of the transcript - the overall grades, the rigor of courses, the course selection, and the trends. It is not a cursory process.</p></li>
</ol>
<p>Quick question: although scores reported after the deadline are not guaranteed a review,are the scores generally reviewed if received mid endish November?Also, should I let the admissions know a score is coming in ahead of time?</p>
<p>It all depends. If the scores are there when the file is reviewed then they will be considered ⊠however if scores are not there then the file will be evaluated with out them. The only time the review of a file is delayed is if required exams (SAT or ACT) are not on file, as that is considered an incomplete file and can not be reviewed. File reviews are not delayed to wait for SAT II subject exams sent after the deadline. </p>
<p>Additionally, the date that the College Board states that they send your scores and when they should arrive at Hopkins has little to do whether your scores will be in the file when it is reviewed. Our office takes time with processing scores, and scores sent after the deadline are not given a priority over other required application materials. </p>
<p>You should have mentioned all scores and future score dates on your application. If you did that, it is too late to update your application if it has been submitted.</p>
<p>If a student who applied ED did not complete the test requirement (for example, he/she took the SAT/ACT/SAT IIs but not the TOEFL, which is required for the student), will his application still be evaluated for Early Decision?? or will he/she automatically get deferred/rejected?</p>
<p>If the TOEFL is required for an applicant and it is not submitted with an ED application, than that application is considered incomplete. The application will be reviewed and if the admissions committee feels that a decision can be rendered without the TOEFL than a decision will made. However, in almost every situation that application will be deferred into regular decision because it is missing required information.</p>
<p>If an applicant turns in all required information but sends in something additional after his file has been reviewed.Will that applicant be deferred because new information can be reviewed for regular?</p>
<p>I am not really sure what you are asking in your question. An applicant is not going to be deferred for submitting an application update. If all required application materials are received than the admissions committee will render a decision based on those required materials. Applicants may submit update materials after the deadline but there is no guarantee such materials will be processed in time and factored in. If an applicant is deferred, any update materials will be reviewed in the regular decision process. </p>
<p>You may want to clarify your question so it makes more sense if I have not already answered it.</p>
<p>AdmissionsDaniel, one more question for you:
My D has taken SAT once, and will put the score on common App. She will take it again in Dec.
My question is that is CB send her Decâs SAT later on, will you still look at it (assume it is in time), or you only look at scores listed in common application?
thanks!</p>
<p>Your daughter she note on her Common Application her plan to take the SAT in December. She can do this by listing the 12/09 date in the SAT section and/or adding a note in the additional information section of the application.</p>
<p>Do make sure she makes sure that she requests the College Board send her new scores to Johns Hopkins before the Jan. 1 deadline so that there is a guarantee her new scores will be evaluated. The scores may arrive late and there is no need to rush the scores as they are not processed by our office any quicker.</p>
<p>Hello, I am an early decision applicant to JHU. I was wondering, does JHU take first term grades into consideration when making decisions for early decision application pool?</p>
<p>Just answered that question on our Hopkins Forums (a much better place to ask me questions!!!)
[Hopkins</a> Forums -> Early Decision Questions](<a href=âHentai 44 - Hentai pornâ>Hentai 44 - Hentai porn)</p>
<p>Admissions Daniel, I had an additional letter of recommendation sent to JHU from a high school coach. He always speaks so passionately and articulately about me but when he sent me a copy of what he wrote it was poorly written. He just repeated my application and did it with bad grammar. Now I am a little embarrassed. How do such letters hurt an application??</p>
<p>Just wondering, if our application was reviewed to be incomplete, should we have received a call or e-mail by now? I am a little bit unsure if one of my components was properly sent and I just want to make sure it was received in time.</p>
<p>One poorly written letter of recommendation is not going to be the sole reason a student is not admitted. Decisions are always based upon multiple factors. There really is no way to determine how a letter of recommendation will ultimately influence the Admissions committee. If it is just poorly written and reveals little about the applicant, and it is a supplemental recommendation, then it will probably have little to no impact. </p>
<p>kid1992
</p>
<p>I am assuming you are an Early Decision applicant. If so, then yes you would have already been contacted by e-mail if your application was incomplete. Our Operations staff has spent the last three weeks contacting all ED applicants to complete their applications. If you were not contacted then your application is complete.</p>
<p>If you are a Regular Decision applicant then you need to be patient and wait. Our Operations team will not start working to complete applications until after the Jan. 1 deadline. Typically that process will begin in early February.</p>