Application Assitance, AdmissionsDaniels?

<p>I already sent in my application to Johns Hopkins...</p>

<p>I have letters of verification for activities I have been involved in, should I send them in with my application, or will the adcoms see this in a negative light, having all those papers to deal with? </p>

<p>I don't want to hurt my chances of admissions....I was thinking of sending all of them in one envelope, and on the front saying (Letters of verification, open only if needed)....</p>

<p>im not admissionsdaniel, but i'll try to help.</p>

<p>is that letter of verification a letter of rec? I've never heard of a letter of verification before.</p>

<p>When you sign your name when submitting your application, you are promising that everything on it is true, so I don't think extra verification of your activities is necessary. If it's a letter of rec explaining you as a person or something like that, it's fine, but if it's just proof that you did stuff, don't send it in IMO.</p>

<p>Idk, they just talk about my qualities a little bit.....but sending in 3 of these when they are required might be a bad idea.....any other opionons will be appreciated...</p>

<p>I agree with pineapple. Unless it includes some sort of letter of recommendation, I wouldn't send it in ,it's just more paperwork to clutter your file.</p>

<p>Don't send it.</p>

<p>My understanding is that if they have questions about your application, they'll contact your guidance counselor.</p>

<p>It is your application so you can submit whatever you want with your application. Do ask yourself though the question whether these supplemental materials add anything to your application. </p>

<p>I prefer to only see supplemental materials that truly add a new dimension to one's application. Awards, certificates, "verifications" just seem quite redundant to me.</p>

<p>These letters talk a little about my personality, but seem cliched.....I guess my teacher recs are always there for insight into my personality.....</p>