<p>"Once you have submitted your Common App to any institution, your application will be locked and you will not be able to make any changes to it."</p>
<p>So, if I submit my application to Yale early action, will I be able to make changes to the Common app afterwards before sending it regular decision to other universities?</p>
<p>that's stupid. i'm applying to a school early that only requires 2 SAT subject tests and that's all i'll have ready by then, but for regular pool one of my colleges wants 3. i'll have three by then, but i won't be taking the third until after application has been locked. will that matter? cuz the college will get my score, just not on the common app.</p>
<p>homers, that's how it was until this year. They've changed the Common App so that you can no longer change the application once it's been submitted to any school. Of course, you can continue to edit and change any supplements.</p>
<p>HOW DO I SUBMIT MY COMMON APPLICATION?
Once you have answered all required questions, you may submit your application. Click the 'Submit' button to submit your application - - this button can be found on the 'Sign & Submit' section and the 'My Colleges' section.</p>
<p>You must submit the Common App to each of your selected institutions. This can be done all at one time, or one at a time. After you have submitted your Common App, you may add additional institutions and submit your application to them, as well. Once you have submitted your Common App to any institution, your application will be locked and you will not be able to make any changes to it.</p>
<p>It's only a guess, but I assume that they felt that making changes to the Common App defeated its purpose - send the same application to all schools. I think the problems specifically with early vs. regular decision dates is a result of the Law of Unintended Consequences.</p>
<p>You can send paper versions of the common app, although I think most schools prefer online apps. Still the limitations imposed by "locking" the application are worth working around. My daughter has been elected to a new school office, and been admitted to another honor society since the beginning of the school year. Since her application (submitted to one college with early dance auditions) is now "locked," we'll be using the individual school applications, or paper common apps for the remainder of her applications. Maybe a decline in usage will lead the common app people to rethink this restriction.</p>
<p>My son will probably do a paper app for an ED application. I don't think it's so wise to lock his application as early as he'd have to for ED apps.</p>
<p>I wonder what the Common App people are thinking with this locking deal.</p>
<p>My D1 did the Common App last year, so I felt like an old pro this year with D2 and never bothered reading the fine print. Thank goodness she hasn't submitted any apps yet!</p>
<p>If the student is rejected from the ED school, they can ask tech support at Common App to unlock the application for updates before doing regular decision apps.</p>
<p>What if a student is deferred but not rejected from an ED school? Does the common application still unlock? Unlocking the common application in mid December or later does not give much time to change it to apply to other schools since most applications are due Jan 1. Many students apply to schools after submitting their ED application but before they get an answer from their ED school in December. This seems very unfair to me. It is not a rule of college admissions that the exact same application must be submitted to every school. It forces students to use paper applications when all colleges prefer online ones.</p>