<p>All supplementary academic work and recommendations should either be attached to the Common Application as Additional Information, or be mailed to the admissions office. The materials must be labeled with your full, legal name as it appears on your admissions application, your date of birth, the name and state or country of your high school, and the subject of the materials.</p>
<p>I don't get the "subject of the material" does it mean label it science if it's a science research paper? Or the title of my research like ex: Subject of the Material: The gold-nano rod on the application of cancer treatment (I just made this up)</p>
<p>Also does it want me to label every page with my name, b-date, state, etc
or is it okay to make a coversheet and put the information?</p>
<p>I think it means label it science if it’s a science research paper. That way they know what department to show it to. Also, I would put the name, b-date, state, etc. on every page. That’s usually what they want… It’s easier to keep track of that way.</p>
<p>Does an abstract help me in the admission process as Yale states that a full paper is better?</p>
<p>I’m pretty sure Yale discourages supplementary material? (see: [Supplementary</a> Materials | Yale College Admissions](<a href=“http://admissions.yale.edu/supplementary]Supplementary”>Supplementary Materials | Yale College Undergraduate Admissions) )</p>
<p>Also, Baby:</p>
<p>“Students engaged in advanced scientific research may submit a research abstract or a full paper for review by a member of Yale’s science faculty. Full papers are generally more useful than abstracts. Students should also consider requesting a letter of recommendation from a research mentor who has been involved personally with the scientific work. The letter should come directly from the mentor and include your full, legal name (as it appears in your application) and the name and state or country of your high school. If the student’s research incorporated work from many individuals, it is helpful to know what specific contributions the student made to the project.”</p>
<p>Well they don’t discourage submitting supplement materials but they do emphasize if it’s not good or astounding the supplement will hurt the admission chance.</p>