<p>Well some people cannot make it to the campus’ due to time and travel constraints.</p>
<p>oh okay. well where do they do the alumni interview then?</p>
<p>you probably go to the alumini’s house, they come to yours, or you guys go to a public place.</p>
<p>in the town you live in?</p>
<p>Well, it depends where the alumni are, obviously. If there’s one in your hometown doing interviews, then yeah, it’ll be there. If there isn’t one in the town you live in doing interviews, you may have to travel a little farther.</p>
<p>im a bit confused…i always had it that they ask u questions for most of the duration of the interview and they afterwards u probably just ask like 3 or 4 questions. someone please explain to me what happens?</p>
<p>Yes. That’s what happens.</p>
<p>Do interviewers every ask any “trick” questions?</p>
<p>What do you consider a trick question</p>
<p>Just any…trick question, I think. It’s sort of hard to explain, but it’s like a question where your answer is absolutely vital and if it is “wrong”, then you have officially bombed your interview. But really, any regular trick question.</p>
<p>Give replies that reflect who you really are. “Trick questions” should be no different from normal ones if you’re just being yourself.</p>
<p>I dont know if this is a trick question,but I’ve heard of someone on this forum who was asked the question “if you were a shoe what type would you be and why?”</p>
<p>Oh - in that case, yes, there are trick questions.</p>
<p>But there are no wrong answers! :)</p>
<p>hey guys the school I’m about to interview at doesn’t have an on campus riding program, would it be negative if I asked them if there were any ways I could ride?</p>
<p>mburg hopeful, I think that maybe it might not hurt. Just don’t ask them outright “Do you have a campus riding program?”…but I’m not too sure. Anyone else want to chime in on this?</p>
<p>Yep…I posted the shoe question…it was asked at Groton. I don’t think it was meant as a trick question though…certainly not a make or break question. Maybe just to see how quickly he processed or an attempt to get an answer that would show his personality. I don’t remember what his answer was, but I can tell you he didn’t care for the interview overall and ultimately didn’t apply.</p>
<p>find something you have in common with your interviewer if you can. it turned out my interviewer was friends with a friend of my mom’s, whose son goes to my school, so we “connected on a personal level” to be cliche. also, she was really cool.</p>