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- Apr 9, 2009
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I know this is premature, but I am wondering about the writing assignments some schools do during the interviews (namely, UCSF).
Let's say a person has really great stats, but is a terrible writer. And not in the way that this person is just hard on himself, but actually is just a horrible writer.
How much will that writing assignment kill this person, assuming an interview?
Also, how much does this person let others edit his Personal Statement, with it possibly ending up sounding differently than how he would ordinarily have written it? This person's concern is that without much editing and input from other people, he would be rejected after the admissions committee read the first sentence. But he is also concerned that they would realize how heavily edited it has been upon reading the writing assignment during an interview.
Sorry this is vague, I am writing on behalf of a friend. He truly will be very competitive with his stats and experiences, but the writing, not good. I believe he even has a writing disability, but it is that bad. Could this one factor be worthy of a rejection?
Thoughts?
Let's say a person has really great stats, but is a terrible writer. And not in the way that this person is just hard on himself, but actually is just a horrible writer.
How much will that writing assignment kill this person, assuming an interview?
Also, how much does this person let others edit his Personal Statement, with it possibly ending up sounding differently than how he would ordinarily have written it? This person's concern is that without much editing and input from other people, he would be rejected after the admissions committee read the first sentence. But he is also concerned that they would realize how heavily edited it has been upon reading the writing assignment during an interview.
Sorry this is vague, I am writing on behalf of a friend. He truly will be very competitive with his stats and experiences, but the writing, not good. I believe he even has a writing disability, but it is that bad. Could this one factor be worthy of a rejection?
Thoughts?