Welcome New College Reps from Tufts

<p>We have not one but two new College Reps from Tufts University - DanAdmiss@Tufts and JonAdmissOfficer - please join me in welcoming them to the CC community!</p>

<p>Please do NOT post questions in this thread - if you have a question related to Tufts admissions, please start a new thread in the Tufts forum. And please don't post specific requests like "JonAdmissOfficer - Important Question!" Rather, post the question in its own thread and you'll get input from other CC members and, if one of our College Reps has some input, he will be free to contribute. We appreciate the time our College Reps spend here, and don't want them to be inundated with personal demands. Thanks for your cooperation.</p>

<p>Welcome, Dan and Jon!</p>

<p>Welcome Guys!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Wooooooooooooot!</p>

<p>Awesome! These college reps will be very helpful!!</p>

<p>Oh, wow, great -- us Tufts students and alums are glad to have you around :)</p>

<p>Welcome! Thanks for offering to participate when you have the time. I'm sure your insights will be very much appreciated by prospective students and their parents. </p>

<p>I'm an alum interviewer for Tufts and I LOVED going to Tufts! :D</p>

<p>well maybe they can be the first ones to employ a little straight talk from admissions about the real stats they require from applicants, so that people below the threshold dont waste time,money and their dreams.</p>

<p>I know someone going to tufts in the fall to play field hockey. its a great school.</p>

<p>Welcome! ! !</p>

<p>Friedokra....at Tufts, as with all schools of its type, the stats of admitted students are well publicized. There are no "required" stats but you can gauge your chances and determine if you are in the ballpark by comparing your stats with those of admitted students. However, even then, Tufts is a very selective school so that even if your stats fall in the ballpark of admitted students, it is no guarantee of admission as Tufts cannot accept all who are qualified for admission. Their acceptance rate is 27%. Further, Tufts, like many other very selective schools, doesn't accept by stats alone and uses a wholistic approach. In other words, plenty of people with high stats can still be denied admission. As far as people "below the threshold," you can easily get an idea if you fall below the bottom 25% of those admitted with certain test scores or if not in the ballpark of class rank, etc. and if you are below the mid range of accepted students, then your chances are slimmer but not necessarily out of the question if you have other compelling aspects in your profile that might compensate. I think it is pretty easy to determine vis a vis one's own qualifications with the accepted student information that is published if Tufts is a reach, match, or safety. Given its very low admit rate, it really isn't a safety for anyone, in my view. But if your stats are within the ballpark, that gives you some indication that you are an appropriate candidate. If you are far below that ballpark and don't have other compelling "plusses" in your profile, it may be a very far reach and not very likely. As far as wasting time or money, none of the very selective schools like Tufts are a sure bet and so I don't view an application (if in the ballpark of admitted students) to be a waste of time or money. If your profile is nowhere in range for Tufts or any school for that matter, than it is not that appropriate to apply to such schools. There are no guarantees when it comes to competitive colleges even if you have what it takes to get in.</p>

<p>Yes!! Two more college reps providing good information!!!!!!</p>

<p>Awesome! Welcome guys! Tufts is a great school, and it's gonna be really cool having you around to help future applicants like me!</p>

<p>Greetings CollegeConfidential posters!</p>

<p>Thanks to those of you who have posted with warm welcomes, and special thanks to the Tufts students who diligently helped so many prospective students with their questions and concerns. They've done a lot to keep the Tufts forum civilized and informative, and I can only hope to match their humor and patience on these boards.</p>

<p>I'm Dan, if you can't tell from my user name, and I've just finished up my first year in admissions and am tremendously excited to be entering into my second. I was a Tufts student before that, and I have a lot of love and admiration for my Alma Mater and current employer. Having said that, I want all of you to know that I place a high premium on transparency and honesty. I believe that the lack of transparency feeds anxiety, and that anxiety in turn presents a barrier to an effective application (aside: I sound like Yoda... "Fear leads to anger, Anger leads to hatred, and hatred leads to the dark side.") I really believe that admissions works better when you understand the process and how to make a better application. I'm looking forward to helping many of you see how to best represent yourself and helping you understand why success is easier if you stay calm, have fun, and tell us the things that YOU WANT TO SAY as opposed to the things you think we want to hear. </p>

<p>Given that perspective on admissions, it's only natural that I approach presenting Tufts the same way. I believe that schools receive better applicants (both in terms of "Fit" and ability) if we are honest about the schools we represent. And it is in that spirit that I've decided to enter the college confidential community. </p>

<p>Here is what I won't do: I will not chance you. And this includes all sorts of variations on chancing like, "How much does a ten point boost on my SATs help?" or "Should I have another leadership activity on my resume?" </p>

<p>Here is why I won't do those things: Answering those questions honestly is impossible. So much of whether or not those things make a difference depends on what we hear from you in your writing, from your teachers, and from your transcript. One of the challenges of approaching admissions holistically and of being interested in you as a human being is that every evaluation we make is contextual and based on how the pieces of an application fit together; nothing stands alone. I recognize how frustrating that can be, but there's a big advantage to do admissions like that - you get to know that the class we bring in each year is fun, intellectual, and interesting. In short, it's a class worth being a part of. Just like we trust you to be honest with us on your applications, I ask you to trust that we do everything we can to be fair and to fill our class with cool, dynamic, spirited (and smart) kids. </p>

<p>I'm thrilled to be joining the CC community, and even more excited to get to know many of you over the coming year.</p>

<p>Welcome! </p>

<p>it's always great to see colleges taking advantage of CC.</p>

<p>Maybe this will settle the old "Tufts Syndrome" debate once and for all...</p>

<p>Hey guys! Either of you want to tell me why Tufts rejected me? </p>

<p>Lol, only kidding. Welcome to the boards!</p>

<p>-The Kidding Coot66</p>

<p>I'm glad to see some admissions reps from Tufts on board! Tufts was one of my daughter's very favorite schools, and she was thrilled when she was accepted. However, she didn't end up there ... it was a financial decision, unfortunately. It is wonderful that Tufts meets need, but I think it's worth noting that there is a group that sort of gets squeezed out. We are part of that group of moderately upper middle class folks who end up with too much loan in the f/a package. We had to limit the final decision to schools with lower loan amounts. Hopefully, Tufts will be able to join the schools iike Davidson & Emory in limiting/reducing loans for certain income groups. Of course, I don't know how many people in our situation actually do matriculate ... maybe enough do, so it's not an issue. For those considering Tufts, please don't let this scare you away. You don't know what YOUR package will look like, and it may well be one you can swing.</p>

<p>Two reps from Tufts - that's great! Personally Tufts isn't for me, but it's a great school =) and, I might change my mind anyway. xD</p>

<p>Helloo!!!!</p>

<p>Howdy Dan and Jon!</p>

<p>Congratulations on becoming admissions reps for Tufts. Hope you enjoy your new jobs.</p>

<p>My husband and I both went to Tufts and our kid is a junior in the combined degree program with the SMFA.</p>

<p>Wow, Dan is so famous. And to think, I knew him before his rise to stardom, when he was nothing more than the Best RA Ever!</p>

<p>Shucks... You'll make me blush. </p>

<p>Backstory: Bluirinka and I go back to her freshman year at Tufts, where I kept her out of trouble and she would compliment my t-shirts. So if she reveals the embarrassing details of my past, you can believe her.</p>