<p>Yay! interview tomorrow! what should i bring to the interview? if a resume, what should all be on there? i'm a little neavous yet excited at the same time! thanks in advance for any response!</p>
<p>don't bring anything. have some questions ready to ask about princeton. good luck!</p>
<p>I did bring my resume. Just a basic list of my EC's,volunteer activities, work, etc, nothing fancy. My interviewer used it to ask me questions about my interests and asked me if she could keept it. Like athlonmj suggested, DEFINITELY ask questions about the school. Good luck!</p>
<p>i agree, no need to bring anything. i did make sure i wear a ring so when i was nervous i could fiddle with it under the desk and it made me feel less nervous when i was speaking because i had something to focus my nervouness on. even if it didnt make me speak more calmly it made me feel like i did.
best of luck</p>
<p>eat banana.......</p>
<p>I gave my interviewer a copy of absolutely everything Princeton got from me.</p>
<p>i love bananas....i go with that...so would it be better to bring a resume? or does it not matter? i have a few questions about the school....how many should u have? what kind of questions would be appropriate? or really good ones?</p>
<p>asking about the eating clubs is a big thing people do with princeton because that is something so unique to the school. you can also ask about any activities you are interested in joining, the types of things to do in town and such.</p>
<p>It depends on whether or not your interview is casual or not. Before my interviewe my interveiwer told me it would be very casual and that we wouldn't even be talking about my stats (so I didn't bring anything).</p>
<p>my interviewer said it will be more like a nice chat than an interview....so i'm guessing casual?....no resume? i feel that if i do bring in a resume, we'll focus on that instead of my personality...since the things in my resume are in my application already...i don't feel that he need to write up another report on my resume/application</p>
<p>i dont really see a point in bringing the interview...all the interviewers is report to the college what they thought of you. It would be useless to have them receive a resume and report it when the admissions committee is already aware of your credentials. If you bring one to strike a conversation...i still think that you could simply tell them instead of giving them a prompt.</p>