University Applications in Canada
University Applications in Canada How to apply to Canadian Universities? The Application Process for Studying…
MBA Schools
US has typically been the most popular destination for pursuing an international MBA degree. A…
IB Goes Non-Examination Route – Here’s All You Need to Know !
After an unbelievably complicated exam season in 2020, the International Baccalaureate (IB), earlier this year,…
Ivy League Schools at a Glance
The ‘Ivy League’ comprises eight of the oldest, most incredibly respected and most selective of…
Scoring Scholarship at Top Universities in Canada
The global pandemic and the resulting recessionary trend may have landed you up in…
IB tutoring – International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme
With your (now postponed) standard X board exams prep going on, another pressing question…
Community Service for High Schoolers
People often tend to neglect others around us, and can be very ignorant of…
College Board does away with Subject SATs and SAT Essay
After quite an eventful 2020, the start of the new year also brought new…
You got deferred…now what
Imagine this- You get an email from your dream university, you excitedly call assemble…
Tackling the “Why this University?” essay
You complete filling the application form, personal statements and the common essays, and just…
Writing a CV for College Applications
Barring publications, your CV should be no longer than one page long. Yes, you read that right. Elon Musk’s CV is a half page. If he can fit his lifelong accomplishments into a half page, there’s no reason you can’t fit your accomplishments in a full page. If it is more than one page, colleges won’t care about what extends beyond the first one. So there really is no point in having a long CV: it’s unprofessional and a waste of time.
Writing a winning UK SOP
Writing a UCAS Personal Statement can be daunting, and very different from anything you’ve written before. There isn’t much room for creativity in the traditional sense: you can’t tell personal stories, or be humorous in a way that you would be in your Common Application. But there is room for creativity in terms of how you present yourself and what you’ve done. This how-to will help you understand what’s expected of you, and how you can give the admissions staff exactly that.