<p>What Financial application forms should I complete ?
I’ve been on the Financial aid website, but the thing is they have an application for “U.S/Canadiancitizen permanent residents and citizens” and one for “International students (excluding Canadian Citizens)”.</p>
<p>I’m Canadian citizen, but I do not live in Canada, so I don’t have the forms required for Canadian citizens… What should I do ? Simply fill in the international form ?</p>
<p>You should most likely fill out the international form, but you might want to call the financial aid office to double-check before submitting an application.</p>
<p>Thank you, Mollie ! @rahrahxx : I think that as long that they receive your scores officialy, it should be fine. It will probably appear on your MyMIT page when they processed your scores. If it does not appear in 2 weeks, you could call them to check.</p>
<p>According to my application tracking, one of my evaluation and my secondary school report/transcript are not processed yet but my teacher and counselor tole me that they mailed them in during the winter break. So I am wondering if the admission office has finished processed all the mails it received from the winter break yet? Is it too soon for me to ask my teacher and counselor to send another copy of those for me?</p>
<p>I can still take a couple of weeks, especially if the documents were sent at the end of the winter break (I sent mine on 12/20/2012 and they just got processed). Don’t send them another copy until they ask for it (which they will do when they’re finished processing everything), it would “spam” their system.</p>
No, they haven’t processed all the mail, and there’s no need to send another copy at this point.</p>
<p>When the mail is done being processed, there will be a blog post from one of the admissions officers telling you this, with instructions on what to do if one of your application pieces is still outstanding. I believe EA applicants who were missing one or more pieces also got an email this year telling them what was missing and how to go about re-submitting.</p>
<p>Would a failed course on my transcript result in instant rejection? The summer after freshman year I took an online course and failed, so I had to retake it the summer after to pass. My average excluding that mark would be in the mid-90s (4.0). Could this one course destroy my application?</p>
How many more subjects are we talking? Can you leave out non-essential/non-academic courses and fit in only the important ones? </p>
<p>If you can leave out, say, gym class and home ec and fit everything in, that’s what I’d suggest. If there are substantially more critical courses than lines, I’d suggest filling out the midyear report to the best of your ability, then faxing a copy of your transcript (doesn’t have to be official) to admissions.</p>
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No, it wouldn’t result in instant rejection. Of course, it’s no great honor, either, so other parts of the application would likely need to be exceptionally strong.</p>
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I don’t have access to MyMIT, so I don’t know where the form ought to be. It’s called the “supplemental document cover sheet”, if that helps at all. Maybe someone who knows how to get to it could chime in.</p>
<p>If I have supplemental information (such as new awards, etc.) that I want to inform MIT about, how should I go about doing so? Is there a specific address I should send an email to?</p>
<p>I had my interview just now. I had problem with contacting my first interviewer, the interview coordinator gave me a contact of another interviewer very recently, and then I had the interview.</p>
<p>My interviewer said that some aspects of the admissions have changed this year, and not everyone is interviewed – some selected ones are interviewed only. It sounded as if getting an interview means/implies some sort of “you passed round1” thing. Is this true? The interviewer said that this is not explicitly written on the website, but is applied starting this year. I had no idea as no web pages said such things, but neither do I believe that he would lie to me without a reason. Any clear answer please?</p>
<p>That can’t be true, I had my interview before I submitted part 2 of my application and before my teachers sent my transcripts/recommendations. They had no other info then my name at this time…</p>
<p>I live in Vietnam. In my country, the Tax department doesn’t provide income tax return to citizens. And because my father is retired, he can’t get a letter from his employer regarding his pension and he only has his pension book. How can I provide material to verify my father’s income in CSS profile? Thank you a lot in advance</p>
Some international regions (but not all) only interview applicants after they complete the application part I, in order to weed out students who aren’t really going to apply and enable them to interview as many serious applicants as possible. Perhaps your region has recently switched to this practice.</p>
<p>As far as I am aware, there are no situations in which being granted an interview indicates any sort of positive prior review of your application.</p>
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You should probably direct this question to the financial aid office, as they’ll have experience dealing with income verification for a variety of countries and situations.</p>