Caroline Koppelman

How to Write the Best Activities Section of the Common App in 2021-2022

On our blog, we talk a lot about essays, but they aren’t the only section on the common app. If you are looking through the common app, you will see another big section: the activities section. This section is made for you to show off your extracurriculars and more. Everyone (hopefully!) does something outside of school and this is your time to show it off.

The Best Guide to College Application Supplements 2021-2022

No two college supplements are the same, but there is one question that shows up again and again. Why our school? If you are applying to multiple schools with supplements you will probably have to write multiple essays on this exact topic (no, you can’t just reuse the same one). While word counts and specifics can vary, these essays always follow a similar structure and goal. After reading this blog post you’ll be set to answer all of them.

What’s The Difference Between A Reach, Target, and Safety School?

There is very little randomness in the college application process. And while everyone seems to believe that they just might be the single outlier, there comes a time when you need to make decisions about how to best spend your time. This week, we’ve been focusing on creating and refining your college list. This blog post will help you categorize your list into reach, target, and safety schools.

How to Research Colleges and Universities

If you just read this blog post, you might be ready to address the question of where you should go to college. But before you can do that, you need to do a hefty amount of research to learn more about what’s out there. When working with TKG clients, most of them don’t know exactly how to research schools. And even when they love certain schools, they’re unfamiliar with key details that will hugely impact their time there. Doing computer research is one of the best ways to decide if you should tour a school and apply to a school. It will also help you categorize it as either a safety, target, or reach school. Keep reading for our steps on how to research colleges:

Where Should I Go to College?

The question of where to attend college is one that comes up at various times throughout your life. It usually starts long before high school, perhaps over dinner with your parents or when you settled on Harvard after watching Legally Blonde. We’re all influenced in one way or another, either by a school list sent over by your high school or a late-night Google search. But when it actually becomes time to put together a school list, a lot of our clients have no idea where to start. If you’re currently in the “not sure where to even start” boat, keep reading for three tips that might help streamline the process.

How to Make a College Essay Stand Out: Break Form

Imagine you are an application reviewer. You are tired. The room is either too hot or too cold. You have already read 8,000 essays and need to read 400 more today and every single one feels like it starts with something like “3 summers ago, I….” or “My grandfather was the strongest person I knew.” How would you feel? If it were us, we would be some combination of bored, tired, and antsy. You turn over the next essay and it’s written as a screenplay and is titled Act 2 Scene 3. You are immediately thrown out of your routine and, more importantly, you’re grateful to this student for livening up your day.

College Admission Essay Format Template

“Hey, can you write a new post for the blog?”

“Sure any idea of what we should write about?”

“I think we need to do one on form and the common app essay.”

“On form?”

“Yeah about how good common app essays break form.”

“Of course! I will work on one about how breaking form can make a really memorable reading experience.”

What Sports Look Good on a College Application

Back in your grandparent's day, it was acceptable to play a sport for fun for four years, get solid grades, take the SAT without practicing much and expect to get into a great school. With Ivy League schools now boasting acceptance rate in the single digits, those days are long gone. But kids often ask us what resume items look good on college applications and particularly, which sports look best. In this post, we talk about how you should structure your extracurriculars.

How to Brainstorm a Common App Essay Topic

Even the most prepared students are usually surprised by some part of the college application process. Maybe it’s a supplement that really makes them think or how short some essays have to be, but there’s one thing that everyone knows about before starting the process: they are going to have to write a killer common app essay.

How to Write Common App Essay Prompt #5, 2021-2022

In continuation of our common app essay series, we’re diving into the fifth prompt. Most prompts fall firmly into one of two camps: absolutely not or maybe. This prompt started as a hard maybe for us, and then ended in the “Thank U, Next” camp after we did some internal brainstorming. Keep reading for our thoughts:

How to Write the Common App Essay Prompt #2, 2021-2022

We’re back with the second prompt, which is surprisingly not so bad! Later in this series, you’ll read more about why our blog is essentially a prompt #7 stan account. But if open-ended nature of the last essay is too much for you to bear, you might consider this one. Keep reading for our thoughts:

How to Write the Common App Essay Prompt #1, 2021-2022

The 2021-2022 college application season is upon us, and we’re here with a series about how to approach and answer all seven of the common app essay prompts. At times, we will suggest things that seem difficult. We’ll write about things that don’t align with what you might have read on the internet. We’ll also let you know when we think it’s best you skip a prompt. We’ve gathered quite a few tips and tricks over the years, and we want to help our blog readers write essays that work. Let’s dive into the first prompt:

Ivy League 2025 Class Numbers

The pandemic has disrupted and upended countless industries. Scores of state-of-the-art corporate developments in major cities across the nation sit empty. Schools everywhere have adapted to remote learning. As the vaccines bring new hope to a country that’s been on pause for more than a year, many Americans might be beginning to return to some semblance of normalcy. But as some corporate employees head back into the office for the first time and students head into summer with hopes that they can pass hard-copy notes to their friends in the fall, college hopefuls might be entering into a new post-pandemic world of college applications entirely. Applications for universities have been at an all-time high for the past decade or so. But this last admissions cycle truly marked a change in competition. And perhaps for good.

Time Management Tips for Juniors

A few weeks ago, we got an email from one of our blog readers who was looking for summer plans related to climate change. We’ll be writing a separate blog post about that, but they were also looking for time management tips. In addition to wanting to pursue an environmental position, she also wanted a paying job, to keep up with an independent project, study for the SAT, and start her college applications. We totally get that balancing work, fun, and extracurricular activities can be challenging. Here are our tips for not going crazy this summer: