<p>In the "About You Personal Information" section of my application, I wrote "Turkish Only" in the "First Spoken Language" box and I left the "Second Spoken Language" blank. </p>
<p>I should have wrote that I speak English as well, right? How will this affect me?</p>
<p>Will you be speaking to them in Turkish or English? xD</p>
<p>I don’t see why it should be that big a deal. But say for example that you made 5-6 minor mistakes. That shows carelessness. Not that I think they’re spending time analyzing all of that stuff, it’s just something to think about.</p>
<p>Call them, if at the very least to give yourself some peace of mind. You shouldn’t have to be worrying after submitting your app.</p>
<p>Im look ovet this now. How come there is no option for choosing your native language first then English second? The only option is native language only or english first then a native language.</p>
<p>I dont think that’s a problem at all. It asks what language you speak at home. If it is not English then don’t put English. They get tons of applicants who are sons and daughters of immigrants who speak their native languages at home. Actually, the admission rate for applicants from household that don’t speak English is higher. Check it out on UC statfinder.</p>
<p>Well, I mean, your schooling has probably been in English if you’re from the Bay area so I think you’ll be okay and they’ll figure that part out.</p>
<p>I also submitted already but listed Vietnamese only as my first spoken language and left second language empty. Should I call admissions or is it fine?</p>
<p>vballer, someone in this thread mentioned earlier that making a mistake like that only matters when there’s five or six to go along with it. That either shows you weren’t diligent or devoted to applying to the school, or rushed the job at the last minute. One small mistake will not sink you; we’re human and we all make mistakes. Hell, in my awards section I forgot to capitalize the first letter of a sentence that was edited in later. Trust me, you’ll be fine.</p>
<p>Besides, if you TRULY only spoke Turkish/Vietnamese, then how would you have been able to fill out the application, or write your personal statements?</p>