Maneuver said:
What is the best approach to filling out secondaries.
I prioritized based on a combination of when the secondary was received and how much work completing the secondary would be. Since I applied on the day AMCAS opened for submission, I wound up getting a bunch of secondaries at once. I divided my secondaries into three general groups:
1) A few secondaries do not require essays. You give those schools some more money, and you're done. Do these secondaries immediately as soon as you receive them.
2) Most secondaries require a couple of additional essays. Do these in the order you receive them. As others have said, some of the essays will begin to overlap as you go through the app season. It won't take you as long to write a research essay or an autobiographical essay when you reach your fourth secondary that is asking for one.
3) A few secondaries require half a dozen essays, want you to re-enter your coursework, or otherwise are long and time-consuming. If you know that you will need to spend a lot of time working on a secondary, save it for the end. First, some of the questions on that secondary will already be answered after you do some of the "easier" secondaries. Second, if you have trouble getting all of your secondaries done in time, it's better to sacrifice one tough secondary versus sacrificing half a dozen secondaries that only need one or two essays.
Best of luck with your apps.
🙂
klmnop said:
No offense but this is a silly question. Its like asking some random person on the street if you should do a load of white laundry, or colors first next week.
No, the question isn't silly, and your analogy doesn't hold. Whether I do the whites or the colors first, I will finish the laundry at the same time, because the time it takes to complete a load of laundry does not depend on the color of the clothes I put into the machine (assuming I choose the same cycle). However, if I have some clothes that get a regular machine wash and dry, others that must be individually hand-washed and laid flat to dry, and a third set that I can send out for dry-cleaning, the length of time for each load *will* differ, and it makes sense to do them in a certain order.
Following my argument above, if I want to get the maximum amount of clothing clean in the shortest amount of time, I would start by sending out the dry-cleaning because that requires the least amount of work. Next, the clothes that can be machine-washed and dried (the biggest group of clothes) should be done, and finally the few items that I have to hand-wash, as these are the most labor-intensive. Even if some of the hand-washed clothes don't get done in time, the majority of my clothes will be washed quickly this way.