Archive for Application – Page 23

Top 10 Tips for Communicating with Us – Recap

During the early portion of the fall of 2010 I published a series of entries providing notes on things to consider when contacting our office, looking for information, and when applying.  In order to have a single reference point, I decided to combine all of these entries into a single entry.

What you see below are links to the 10 posts.  If you have yet to review the list, I highly recommend doing so. All of the information will help to ensure that we are able to assist you in the best manner possible and that you will be able to submit your application smoothly.

Number 1 – Always use the same email address when communicating with our office – this includes the email you use when you submit your application

Number 2 – Avoid Unnecessarily Creating a Duplicate Online Application

Number 3 – Avoid copying several parties on the same email and avoid long emails

Number 4 – Thoroughly review our FAQ Page

Number 5 – When leaving a voice mail message speak slowly, clearly, and state your telephone number twice

Number 6 – If you must mail something to our office, use a private mail courier

Number 7 – Check out our student, alumni, faculty, staff interview page

Number 8 – Familiarize Yourself with Expenses and Start searching for fellowhips/grants as soon as possible!

Number 9 – Attend an information session or recruitment event

Number 10 – Subscribe to this blog!



Top 10 Tips for Communicating With Us No. 10: Subscribe to this blog

Updated: March 2016

This is the tenth and final entry in our “Top 10″ list for you to consider when communicating with our office and applying.

Number 10 – Subscribe to this blog!

The best way to stay up-to-date regarding matters of admission is to subscribe to this blog.  Yes, the SIPA website is a great source of information, and you should familiarize yourself with it, but for the most part the website is static and rarely updated.  We try to update it as needed, but the blog is much more informative as far as the day-to-day things going on in our office.

At the top of the menu to the right, there is hyperlinked text that says “Click here to subscribe to the Blog.” Simply enter your email and each and every time this blog is updated, you will receive an email message letting you know here is new content.

Why is it a good idea to subscribe?  Well, for one we try to monitor common questions and post answers to the site for mass consumption.  Two, this is your window into the admission cycle.  We will update you on what is going on in our office.  And finally, this is a great way to find out more about what is going on at SIPA and to learn about fellowship opportunities.  You can consider this to be the most interactive web space concerning matters of admission and financial aid.

Top 10 Tips for Communicating With Us No. 2: Don’t create duplicate applications

Updated: March 2016

This is the second entry in our “Top 10″ list for you to consider when communicating with the Office of Admissions  and applying.

Number 2 – Don’t create duplicate applications

It is bound to happen, you create an online application and somewhere along the line you are going to lose your username or password. Please do not follow the temptation to simply create a new application. Having multiple applications in the system can lead to problems with tracking documents. Our software provider has tools that will allow you to retrieve your username and password so do not create another account because you forgot your password.

As an example of what can happen, perhaps you have one “active” application in the system and one that is “hibernating” (you lost the user name or password) and will never be used. Our office does not know which is the “real” application and this may lead to our office tracking different documents to different applications and therefore neither of the applications may reach complete status. Please contact technical support (see instructions on the application site) if you lose your username or password and do not succumb to the temptation to create a new application.

There is one important footnote. In some cases SIPA does allow for applications to more than one program. In this case, applicants will want to create more than one application in the online system and inform our office that they are applying to two different programs by sending an email to [email protected]. Here are some important details. In examples 2 and 3 below, the same application system is used, but two separate applications must be created.

  1. An applicant may not apply to both the MIA and MPA program.
  1. An applicant may apply to either the MIA or the MPA and to any of the following programs: PEPM, PESP, MPA-DP, EMPA.
  1. Applicants can also apply to either the MIA or MPA and to any one of the international dual degree programs listed here: an MPA with the London School of Economics, an MPA with Sciences Po, an MPP with Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, an MPP with the Hertie School of Governance, and an MIA or MPA with FGV-EAESP in São Paolo.
  1. The dual degree MIA program with Sciences Po requires that an application be submitted only through the Sciences Po application site. If an applicant wishes to apply for the dual MIA degree with Sciences Po and to SIPA, that is fine and would require two applications: 1) one for the dual degree program through the Sciences Po Web site 2) One for the stand alone program at SIPA through our online system.

For details on all of our international dual degree programs, visit our international dual-degree page. If any of this sounds confusing, I do not blame you – it can be a bit complex. If you have questions about our international dual degree programs our Office of Student Affairs can assist you at [email protected]. If applying to a Columbia University dual degree program, you must submit separate applications to each school. For a list of Columbia dual-degree programs click here.

It is possible to create two applications in our system, but you should only do so if you are absolutely sure. This is one of those circumstances where it might make the most sense to contact our office if you do not feel you understand all of the details. You can reach us at [email protected].

 

 

Spring Admission Notes #4

Admitted applicants for the spring term face a tight time line when it comes to enrolling.  Therefore, I want to provide a bit of insight so that those who are admitted can be prepared to act quickly.  As stated in a previous entry, admission decisions will be published via the online application site in early November.  Applicants will receive an email when an admission decision is ready to view.

Admitted applicants will then have until December 3rd to pay a non-refundable enrollment deposit of $1,000.  This deposit acts as a credit toward tuition when applicants enroll.  Orientation for new students will then begin on January 10th and classes will start on January 18th.

We will start a Google Group for admitted students as soon as offers go out and include current students for admitted applicants to interact with.  There will also be a welcome page for admitted applicants with important information about the steps that need to be completed prior to arriving on campus.

There will be one more entry on the nuts and bolts of spring admission . . . I’ll leave it to readers to guess the topic . . .

Top 10 Tips for Communicating With Us No. 1: Use the Same Email Address and a Descriptive Subject Line

Updated: March 2016

We do our best to keep up with the volume of inquires and applications our office receives but the reality is that size of our staff and the number of inquiries/applications makes it hard to keep up.  In 2010, I posted a “Top 10” list with the intent of helping applicants to receive the most efficient service possible from our office.  We know you want answers quickly and we want to do everything in our power to make that possible.

The list I compiled is still solid but I will update it with a bit of new information.  I hope this list will help you strategize as you communicate with the Office of Admissions, search for information, and apply.  I will post 10 entries over the next couple of weeks and then compile them into a single entry for future reference.

In reviewing all of the entries please understand that I am not in any way trying to dissuade you from contacting our office, rather my hope is to provide information that will allow you to receive a response as soon as possible and avoid delays.

Number 1: Always use the same email address when communicating with our office — this includes the email you use when you submit your application — and use a descriptive subject line.

This might sound obvious, but in my experience it is common for people to have at least three email addresses:  their personal email address, their work email address, and their alumni email address.

It is highly recommended that you pick one and use the same email address the entire time you communicate with our office and that this email match the email listed on your admission application.  This helps us to research your situation in the quickest and most comprehensive manner possible.  With several thousand people applying, just finding someone’s record can be a challenge.

The first thing I do when I start to research an applicant’s inquiry or question is to plop the email address into my search bar.  If all of the emails are from the same account the process is greatly simplified and I am able to provide information in the most accurate and timely fashion possible.

Also, I cannot tell you how many times someone has emailed our office with a question and used a different address than the one on their application.  When looking someone up in our system  I do so by email address.  Thus if you email with a different address than the one you used when applying it takes much longer to pull up the appropriate application record.

From personal experience I recommend against using your business email address. The primary reason is that if you are admitted to SIPA you are going to leave your employer and your email account will be terminated.  Using your personal email address will avoid complications that can arise when you might request an email address change.  While it is possible to update your email, we have several software systems so it can take time and possibly lead to missed communications.

Do not be tempted to use an email address that you think will impress us.  For example you might feel that you should use your work email address because it looks “impressive.”  Rather use the email address that you consider to be your permanent address and one that you check frequently.  It is far less impressive to have to amend your record in our systems over time- consistency is what impresses us.

And finally, be sure to be descriptive in your subject line. It helps prepare our office as to what your email is regarding, and it is extremely helpful for your subject to be clear if we wind up having to forward it to another department or recipient. It should be obvious from the start what your email contains. We can quickly respond to and find information regarding an email with subject lines such as “Question regarding TOEFL Waiver” or “Additional Transcript from Undergraduate Institution” than we can read through emails with a subject line that simply reads “Question” or “Materials”

I do have two bonus tips.

First, please include your email address in the body of your email – for example below your name (an email signature with your email included is highly recommended).  Sometimes emails get forwarded to other parties and only the body gets sent along.  If I just get the body and the header is left off, we have no email address to respond to and this leads to delays while we try to track down email contact information.

From my experience this is a very common problem when people forward me emails from their Blackberry or mobile phone.  I cannot tell you the number of times a SIPA faculty or staff member has forwarded me a message and there is no visible email address.  So, just to make sure, I recommend setting up an email signature that includes your full email address.

Second, make sure to check your junk mail box every now and then.  Every once in awhile someone will send me a message and it will inexplicably end up in my junk email.  I recommend that you add our email address to your “approved sender” list and check your junk mail every once in a while to ensure our messages are not being sent to where you will not be able to view them in a timely fashion.

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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