<p>Brown is my daughter’s first choice. Her numbers are great; her recommendations are great; her extracurriculars are thin. We are from California, and flying her to Rhode Island would be tough right now financially. Likely, she can interview out here with an alum. We worry how much it will hurt her if we don’t fly her out to Rhode Island for an in-person interview. Any experience?</p>
<p>The following is from the Brown admissions site’s Q & A:</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>So, don’t even think about it. If an alum contacts you, then you will have an interview where you live or on the phone (or, I suppose, these days one can do it on Skype). Brown admissions does no interviews itself.</p>
<p>Yeah, all Brown interviews are conducted by alums they do not expect anyone to come to Rhode Island. So, don’t worry about it.</p>
<p>it means very very little</p>
<p>The interview is crucial, according to Admissions.</p>
<p>The interviewers can really play an important role ( granted can doesn’t always mean does). But, don’t dismiss it.</p>
<p><– from CA, female, great numbers/recs/essays, thin ECs, great interview (though due to a confusion I arrived half an hour late), got in</p>
<p>fireandrain, you’re simply incorrect</p>
<p>From the Admissions site Q&A:
</p>
<p>Sorry Napoleon, YOU are the one who is incorrect.</p>
<p>My interviewer told me that it holds little weight. Another interviewer I talked to said they do not have much of an affect. Another told me he gave two positive write-ups and two negative write-ups and none of them got in. And still another told me she gave four thumbs ups and only one got in.</p>
<p>I’m sure you don’t want a bad interview, but if you’re applying Early Decision, you obviously are extremely interested in going to Brown and you’ll do fine.</p>
<p>where are you getting this information? i’m basing it off personal and others experiences, and a train of logic (this may not be yours) that says a subjective personal interview from someone they don’t know will hold little weight. most applicants impress their interviewers and get good reviews – there’s little to distinguish one itnerview review from another so it goes out the window. if you bomb it, that’s another story.</p>
<p>My information comes directly from numerous conversations with admissions officers – you know, the ones who read the interviews and decide who gets accepted – over a couple of decades. That includes the opinion of the dean of admissions.</p>
<p>under what conditions do you write a negative review, fireandrain?</p>
<p>I still have my doubts about how much the interview means to the application just because of the issue of standards and how that varies from one random persons pov to another. Give the same interviewee to 5 people and you get 5 opinions. Until I hear otherwise from an adcom I’m not drinking that kool aid.</p>
<p>dawgcity: I gave one example here: <a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/brown-university/810532-brown-interview-faq-answers.html[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/brown-university/810532-brown-interview-faq-answers.html</a></p>
<p>wolfmanjack: Well, I’ve heard what adcoms say about interviews, and that’s where I’m going. If I really thought they were meaningless, I wouldn’t spend as much time on them as I have in the last few decades.</p>
<p>fireandrain: so you give a negative review if the person doesn’t have questions? What if the rest of the interview goes well? The reason I ask is because during my interview, I asked all the questions I had during the rest of the interview because I was trying to make it into a conversation, then the interviewer asked me if I had any questions and I was a little bit taken aback. I managed to squeeze out 2 or 3 but there were awkward moments there when I was trying to think of a good one that I hadn’t already asked. Would you give a negative review in this case?</p>
<p>I did not say that I would give a negative report if someone didn’t ask questions. Read what I wrote again.</p>
<p>@fireandrain
where normally you do the interview? I did my interview with Yale in a Starbucks :)</p>
<p>On their website they did say if you don’t do one it won’t harm your chances but they did not say it will not boost your chances. Why give them if they do nothing? They may boost your chances a little. By they way they contacted me about the interview and I’m RD for Class of 2014. I wouldn’t dare email them and ask for one. lol Ivy league admissions scare me, but Brown seem more down to earth when I talk to them.</p>