<p>Do prospective students need to arrange an interview to apply to JHU . Or is it recommended?
I am really interested in JHU . So I am trying my best to go there. Please help me.</p>
<p>All of the above for me as well.</p>
<p>An interview is not required - it is optional and informational only. We do not make a recommendation about whether a student should or should not interview, as the interview does not play a role in the admissions selection process.</p>
<p>On-campus interviews: <a href="http://apply.jhu.edu/visit/interviews.html%5B/url%5D">http://apply.jhu.edu/visit/interviews.html</a>
Off-campus (alumni) interviews: <a href="http://apply.jhu.edu/visit/aluminterviews.html%5B/url%5D">http://apply.jhu.edu/visit/aluminterviews.html</a></p>
<p>Useful Interview Guide PDF: <a href="http://apply.jhu.edu/pdf/interview_prep.pdf%5B/url%5D">http://apply.jhu.edu/pdf/interview_prep.pdf</a></p>
<p>i guess go by what admissionsdan had to say but as for me, a student, ive tried to request an interview for all of my colleges and id have to say ive nejoyed them and i thought were a nice supplement to whatever i had. </p>
<p>i think the main thing in an interview is if the person interviewing you can remember 3 important things about at the end of the conversation.</p>
<p>best of luck.</p>
<p>Do note that the interview policy is different for every school - some require, some recommend, some are evaluative, some are informational, etc. You should check with every school you are applying to.</p>
<p>But as I said above, for Johns Hopkins interviews are optional and informational only. We feel that because it is impossible for use to interview our entire applicant pool (actually less than 10% of applicants do interviews) than we do not want to provide an unfair advantage (or disadvantage) for those students who do interview.</p>
<p>You should request an interview if you want to learn more about JHU and/or want to have a personal one-on-one conversation with a current JHU student (on-campus) or JHU alum (off-campus).</p>