There are two distinct elements in an interview:
1. The overall feel of the interview (Did you connect with your interviewer and get a good vibe?)
2. What you actually said during the interview (Did you give good answers?)
I know that both are very important for a successful interview and are partially related to each other, but I have a question for any interviewers that might be here: Which is more important? What's actually conveyed to the admissions committee through the reports?
Intuitively, it seems as if the overall feel should be more important since the interview is largely based on the subjective feel of the applicant. However, it seems that when the interviewer translates that interview onto a paper report, most of the notes in the report are from things that the applicant spoke. Considering that there is usually a significant time between the interview and the day that the admissions committee votes on the applicant, it seems that these written notes of the applicant's words become increasingly important, with their significance amplified over the more subjective elements of the interview that can't really be written down on paper.
For example, say that you have two interviewees: One is very personable and charismatic, but he occasionally gives some ridiculous answers. The other is somewhat reserved and slightly awkward, but his answers are concise and well-reasoned. Who would be seen more favorably by the admissions committee, taking into account the fact that most (if not all) of the committee only sees a description of the interview on paper?
Sorry for the long post, but I feel that it's a topic that has surprisingly little discussion on these forums.
1. The overall feel of the interview (Did you connect with your interviewer and get a good vibe?)
2. What you actually said during the interview (Did you give good answers?)
I know that both are very important for a successful interview and are partially related to each other, but I have a question for any interviewers that might be here: Which is more important? What's actually conveyed to the admissions committee through the reports?
Intuitively, it seems as if the overall feel should be more important since the interview is largely based on the subjective feel of the applicant. However, it seems that when the interviewer translates that interview onto a paper report, most of the notes in the report are from things that the applicant spoke. Considering that there is usually a significant time between the interview and the day that the admissions committee votes on the applicant, it seems that these written notes of the applicant's words become increasingly important, with their significance amplified over the more subjective elements of the interview that can't really be written down on paper.
For example, say that you have two interviewees: One is very personable and charismatic, but he occasionally gives some ridiculous answers. The other is somewhat reserved and slightly awkward, but his answers are concise and well-reasoned. Who would be seen more favorably by the admissions committee, taking into account the fact that most (if not all) of the committee only sees a description of the interview on paper?
Sorry for the long post, but I feel that it's a topic that has surprisingly little discussion on these forums.