Do Stanford, Johns Hopkins, and Occidental allow you to send in science supplement?

<p>Hi, I'm looking to send in my science research project abstract to the colleges I'm applying to. I'm wondering if the three college/universities listed in the title allow you to do so (I cannot find it stated outright online). I found something about arts supplements for Stanford but no science ones, although I can't really believe that. Please link me to any sources. Thanks!</p>

<p>An abstract should be fine. A 30 pp. paper would not. Good luck to you.</p>

<p>Thank you for your response. However, I heard that Yale actually prefers the entire paper. Where can you find this info/is this true?</p>

<p>I would email Yale admissions directly. I find that hard to believe however. Can you report back what you find out?</p>

<p>The Yale admissions officer told me DON’T give a whole paper, but again, check with Yale itself.</p>

<p>[Supplementary</a> Materials | Application to Yale College | Freshmen | Office of Undergraduate Admissions](<a href=“Home | Yale College Undergraduate Admissions”>Home | Yale College Undergraduate Admissions)</p>

<p>^Under Academic Work, it states that full papers are generally more useful than abstracts.</p>

<p>@RhaegarTargaryen: Thanks for the source!</p>

<p>Does anyone know if you’re allowed to send in science supplements when they didn’t explicitly say it on the website? I’ll probably email the specific colleges/universities I’m thinking about soon, but I wanted to see if people have experiences to share first.</p>