<p>I request all the seniors , nepalese undergraduates in USA, to answer some of our questions that , confuse me alot, and are not answered by EducationUSA centers and colleges' Websites .</p>
<p>Well you have to state your questions too right?</p>
<p>ok…how to send in the ISFAA form ???</p>
<p>ok…how to send in the ISFAA form ???</p>
<p>Print it down,fill in and ask if you college if you can scan and mail it to them!</p>
<p>^^ or you can fax it too. most colleges prefer to get the ISFAA by fax rather than by post or email!! but ask your college first what they would prefer.</p>
<p>Yeah, ask you college. And by ask, emailing is preferable. XPP</p>
<p>or you can also give your filled ISFAA to your counselor who could send it to the college along with the other documents that he will be sending via postal mail. I am doing the same.</p>
<p>^but for most colleges the financial aid documents and the school forms are required to be submitted to different offices. so rather than to post two different packets to Admission Office and Financial Aid Office its better to fax/scan and email the documents like ISFAA</p>
<p>Same difference:just scan and send, or fax.</p>
<p>most colleges have a policy of not opening the e-mail attachments,like Harvard MIT, so e-mail is , i guess, out of the question. So sending the ISFAA form by facsimile is the only option i have…///</p>
<p>how do you know most colleges don’t open email attachment? Almost all the colleges I applied to opened email attachments. I even sent my app essay via email, as an attachment!</p>
<p>I sent my supplements and aid forms by email. They do accept. Just notify them.</p>
<p>sixstringsrocker- can you name the college??</p>
<p>It’s true. I know Stanford doesn’t like to download attachments. An admissions officer specifically told me they don’t tend to do that because their inbox is swamped by thousands of email.</p>