Research paper submission

<p>I am a international student and I have completed 2 research paper in physics . </p>

<p>1) How can i send it to Yale ?
2) can i fax it or upload online or snail mail it??</p>

<p>Please go to the Y website, it has a section specifically for ‘Supplementary Materials’ and states how to submit research papers.</p>

<p>Id go for fax. And write date of birth and name in every page. But as you are going for rd snail mail may be fine. As for email they might not open attachments. Check website for more info. You can send via DHL OR FEDEX as well.</p>

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<p>You apparently didn’t read the website either.</p>

<p>Oops ! my bad.</p>

<p>Think carefully about why you need to submit two papers instead of just one – Yale is clear in encouraging applicants to emphasize quality over quantity. Would one paper and the abstract for the other be sufficient to give admissions (and possibly a physics prof) enough info to gauge your research interests and capacity? </p>

<p>Assuming that one of these papers is reasonably short (so that the size of the digital file doesn’t get out of hand), I think the best option would be to scan it and append it to the Common App. Backup would be to send it snail mail.</p>

<p>Entomom may have seen something on the admissions website that I missed, but as far as I can tell, Yale doesn’t explicitly encourage or discourage faxing a research paper. The fax number listed for the admissions office (203-777-6120) is positioned as a place to send additional school materials rather than supplementary academic materials, but if Yale explicitly says don’t fax that kind of thing, I missed it.</p>

<p>When I spoke to a representative about sending a research paper, they said that the best thing to do would be to send a recommendation letter from your mentor. From this, they can find out to what extent you participated in the project, in what ways, and a little bit about your personality. </p>

<p>I didn’t even end up sending the research paper, I just provided the title and the authors and figured if they wanted to know more, they had that available (assuming someone would know how to look it up on pubmed), and if they got enough information from the recommendation letter, they wouldn’t need to see the written project.</p>

<p>They don’t say NOT to FAX, but they DO state specifically what they WANT you to do.</p>

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<p>The Suppl Materials website also addresses the mentor letter.</p>