<p>Would it be possible sending in my research paper hurt me? I submitted my paper into a few competitions and haven't got anything, so i don't know if its good or not. I worked at a small local school and I haven't gotten too much feedback on my paper. Would sending in the paper (though on their website they say its more useful!) hurt me instead? Its totally possible I could have some error/wrong data/incorrect analysis in the text, so would that actually decrease my chances, since idk if my paper is good or not?
Anyone sent in their paper before??</p>
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<p>[Supplementary</a> Materials | Yale College Admissions](<a href=“http://admissions.yale.edu/supplementary]Supplementary”>http://admissions.yale.edu/supplementary)</p>
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<p>What concerns me is that you haven’t gotten much feedback on the paper, don’t know how good it is, and don’t know if it has errors. Do you have a researcher who was your mentor for the project, what do they say?</p>
<p>the people at the lab (its a very small organization) have looked over it and think its good. but the results from the places i’ve submitted it to aren’t looking too great. Should I just send them an abstract? Though they DO say they prefer a whole paper though.</p>
<p>I would say don’t send it. A person should send it when it is a stunning research paper, one of a kind, Etc. Don’t send possible marginal work</p>
<p>alright, i won’t send in anything then (: Now, i have no supplements ):</p>
<p>Oh, I’m not sure that I agree with splat11. Is there a science teacher at your school or local university who might be able to advise you on the paper’s quality from an academic/research perspective?</p>