coyabean Posted December 6, 2009 Posted December 6, 2009 I don't know about you guys but funding the application process has been part of the turmoil. In light of Emory's free app I thought it might be beneficial to collect a list of other free apps? Perhaps it could gain sticky status?
a fragrant plant Posted December 6, 2009 Posted December 6, 2009 sigh, all of the schools i'm applying to are not free.
Ziz Posted December 7, 2009 Posted December 7, 2009 In the UK: Edinburgh St Andrews UCL Likely others I have not encountered yet...Cambridge and Oxford were free 3 years ago, but that was before online applications so they may have a fee now.
UnlikelyGrad Posted December 7, 2009 Posted December 7, 2009 I don't know about you guys but funding the application process has been part of the turmoil. In light of Emory's free app I thought it might be beneficial to collect a list of other free apps? Notre Dame was free for domestic students. I almost applied for that very reason...until I realized that I didn't want to go there. Do remember that even though the app itself is free, you still have to pay ETS for another score, plus transcript fees. (I had to send transcripts from 5 schools so the latter was not inconsequential.)
Dr._Robotnik's_Shadow Posted December 7, 2009 Posted December 7, 2009 Rochester was the only free app out of my 14 apps.
johndiligent Posted December 7, 2009 Posted December 7, 2009 I don't know about you guys but funding the application process has been part of the turmoil. In light of Emory's free app I thought it might be beneficial to collect a list of other free apps? Perhaps it could gain sticky status? Good idea, Coyabean! I can't help with it since not a single one of my apps had a fee that was under $100, but I support the movement.
Sparky Posted December 7, 2009 Posted December 7, 2009 Notre Dame was free for domestic students. Notre Dame had a fee this year. There was a discount for applying early, but it still wasn't free. Do remember that even though the app itself is free, you still have to pay ETS for another score, plus transcript fees. (I had to send transcripts from 5 schools so the latter was not inconsequential.) Re: transcript fees, did you notice a difference between public schools and private schools? I have to send transcripts from 2 private schools, both of which are free, and from 2 public schools, both of which charge a fee. What a way to cut costs.
NeuroNerd86 Posted December 7, 2009 Posted December 7, 2009 Drexel University biomedical PhD online application is free. So is NIH GPP (but that one is just one step, you also have to apply to a partner school)
BillyPilgrim Posted December 8, 2009 Posted December 8, 2009 My Vanderbilt French app was free of a fee
coyabean Posted December 8, 2009 Author Posted December 8, 2009 My Vanderbilt French app was free of a fee You're right! I'd forgotten about Vandy.
repatriate Posted December 9, 2009 Posted December 9, 2009 Carnegie Mellon has a free online app And the department at CMU that I applied to has a fee-bearing, paper only application. Queen's University Belfast (UK) has a free application. You can also apply for fee waivers at several schools through one central form: http://www.cic.net/Home/Students/FreeApp/Introduction.aspx Granting a fee waiver is up to the departments, and you have to meet some basic minimum criteria (3.0 GPA). The schools are: University of ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignIndiana UniversityIndiana University/Purdue University at IndianapolisUniversity of IowaUniversity of MichiganMichigan State UniversityUniversity of MinnesotaNorthwestern UniversityOhio State UniversityPennsylvania State UniversityPurdue UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
UnlikelyGrad Posted December 9, 2009 Posted December 9, 2009 On 12/7/2009 at 1:16 PM, Sparky said: Notre Dame had a fee this year. There was a discount for applying early, but it still wasn't free. I went back and checked, and applying to the chemistry department is still free for domestic applicants. I can't speak for other departments though. Quote Re: transcript fees, did you notice a difference between public schools and private schools? I have to send transcripts from 2 private schools, both of which are free, and from 2 public schools, both of which charge a fee. What a way to cut costs. I attended 5 schools: 2 community colleges ($3/transcript); 1 incredibly well-known university ($7/transcript), my alma mater, a state school ($4 for first transcript, $2 for additional ordered at the same time), and the state university where I did my post-bac work (free). Amazingly, both state universities are California schools (both CSU system)--I would have thought that they, at least, would have the same fee structure!
rising_star Posted December 9, 2009 Posted December 9, 2009 My private university transcripts were covered by a one-time transcript fee (I think it was $50 or something) paid freshman year. Now, I just go online and request them whenever I need them. I actually have a stockpile of like 5 or so at my house that I can send out whenever I need them. My study abroad transcripts are $6 each, plus a processing fee of $5. My MA (public) university is $2 each. And my current (PhD, public) university is $6 a pop. I prefer what my undergrad did, obviously.
eucalyptus Posted December 9, 2009 Posted December 9, 2009 My private university transcripts were covered by a one-time transcript fee (I think it was $50 or something) paid freshman year. Now, I just go online and request them whenever I need them. I actually have a stockpile of like 5 or so at my house that I can send out whenever I need them. My study abroad transcripts are $6 each, plus a processing fee of $5. My MA (public) university is $2 each. And my current (PhD, public) university is $6 a pop. I prefer what my undergrad did, obviously. My undergrad school's fee for transcripts is $20 each! It really sucks. Luckily my grad school gives them out free, but you have to wait ages while they send them across the pond.
Eyetea Posted December 10, 2009 Posted December 10, 2009 The Penn State Chemistry application was also free this year.
Serric Posted December 10, 2009 Posted December 10, 2009 University of Rochester and WUSTL were free, as well as Drexel University.
hadunc Posted December 30, 2009 Posted December 30, 2009 Loyola University-Chicago's English graduate program app is free if you submit online.
catilina Posted December 31, 2009 Posted December 31, 2009 While I appreciate it, I cannot understand why any school would make its application free. It means giving up revenue and getting lots of applications from people who aren't that serious about the school.
alexis Posted December 31, 2009 Posted December 31, 2009 While I appreciate it, I cannot understand why any school would make its application free. It means giving up revenue and getting lots of applications from people who aren't that serious about the school. I was thinking kind of the opposite...particularly if it's a lower-ranked school, perhaps having a free app encourages more people (and potentially good candidates, who otherwise would put their money towards top programs) to apply. And maybe that results in more applicants=lower acceptance rate to brag about? Free apps can add the "why not?" factor--although you do have to pay for GRE scores & transcripts. I wonder if it's a private school thing (or more common among those). I've noticed private schools tend to have more of those "perks..." i.e. you can order your transcripts for free from some. (Of course, they get their $$ from their really high tuition.) Who knows, it could be none of those reasons, I never get admissions offices and how they work!
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