Press "Enter" to skip to content
GMAT Club

Dartmouth Tuck MBA Essay Tips and Deadlines [2022 – 2023], Class Profile

accepted.com 0
Dartmouth Tuck MBA Essay Tips & Deadlines

Tuck has developed a very purposeful process focused on admitting people who meet its four criteria, summed up as: smart, accomplished, aware and encouraging. The criteria match my understanding of the Tuck community, and also are relatively easy to grasp. Once Tuck established and defined these criteria, it designed its application process to unearth the qualities it’s seeking in candidates.

Ready to get to work on your application? Read on.

In this post:

  • Tuck application essay tips
  • Tuck application deadlines
  • Tuck class profile

For more information on the Tuck criteria and the application process, please review:

Dartmouth Tuck MBA application

Tuck MBA application essay #1

Tuck students can articulate how the distinctive Tuck MBA will advance their aspirations. Why are you pursuing an MBA and why Tuck? (300 words)

What distinctive aspects of the Tuck MBA experience will help you realize your post-MBA goals? What motivates you to apply to Tuck and would compel you to accept an offer of admission? That’s really what they want to know. And those elements of the program need to be associated with your aspirations.

In terms of structuring a response, you can start with your aspirations, which should lead directly to your reasons for pursuing an MBA. Then show how Tuck is perfectly suited to propel you towards your vision of your future. Focus on the distinctive aspects of Tuck’s program.

Tuck MBA application essay #2

Tuck students recognize how their individuality adds to the fabric of Tuck. Tell us who you are. (300 words)

This is a big question with a small allotment of words to answer it in.

Think about aspects of you and your life that reflect your individuality and aren’t reflected in other parts of the application or in other essays. Choose the most important elements and spotlight them in this essay.

There are so many different ways to approach the response that I’m not going to suggest a structure. I do urge you to think deeply about what makes you You. Also, deliberate carefully and select those experiences and attributes that you want to highlight for Tuck.

If your transcript and test score show you’re smart and your resume shows you’re accomplished, Essays #1 and #2 will show how aware you are.

Tuck MBA application essay #3

Tuck students are encouraging, collaborative and empathetic, even when it is not convenient or easy. Describe a meaningful experience in which you exemplified one or more of these attributes. (300 words)

This question asks you to provide one experience that shows you contributing and supporting someone else’s success. Your assistance could be on or off the job.

While Tuck hasn’t given a timeframe, I would recommend that you go back not more than two years and certainly not more than four years.

A CAR approach will work well here:

  •  Challenge both for you and the beneficiary
  •  Action
  •  Result

Keep it specific and concrete or you will blend in with others writing in generalities. You’re empathetic, helpful response to the other party’s situation is key. Set the scene by describing the situation. How did you help the other party succeed? What were the challenges you both faced? What were the results?

Tuck MBA application essay #4 (Optional)

Please provide any additional insight or information that you have not addressed elsewhere (e.g., atypical choice of evaluators, factors affecting academic performance, unexplained job gaps or changes). Complete this question only if you feel your candidacy is not fully represented by this application. (300 words)

If you have any of the elements mentioned in Tuck’s question, by all means, address them here. You do NOT want the admissions committee guessing or assuming wrongly when they come across something anomalous.

If you feel your application represents your candidacy well, don’t feel compelled to respond to the optional essay. If you believe, however, that your application is missing key elements of your story, then briefly include them here. Whether it’s a challenge that you’ve faced or a hardship overcome or other context for what you’ve achieved that will help the admissions committee appreciate your candidacy, include it.

But don’t waste their time with drivel or material that’s elsewhere in your application. Doing so would reveal a definite lack of judgment, and in Tuck terms, awareness.

Tuck MBA application essay #5 (To be completed by all reapplicants)

How have you strengthened your candidacy since you last applied? Please reflect on how you have grown personally and professionally. (300 words)

This is THE question for reapplicants. Why should they admit you this time around? How are you better than you were when they rejected you last time?

For expert guidance with your Dartmouth Tuck MBA application, check out Accepted’s MBA Application Packages, which include comprehensive guidance from an experienced admissions consultant. We’ve helped hundreds of applicants get accepted to Dartmouth Tuck’s MBA program and look forward to helping you too!

Dartmouth Tuck 2022-23 application timeline

Round Application Deadline Decisions Released
1 September 26, 2022 December 8, 2022
2 January 4, 2023 March 16, 2023
3 March 27, 2023 May 4, 2023
Round 1 Consortium October 15, 2022 December 8, 2022
Round 2 Consortium January 5, 2023 March 16, 2023

Applications are due by 5:00pm ET

Source: Tuck website

Stay on top of MBA deadlines with the MBA Admissions Calendar!

[Click here to add the calendar to your Google calendar; or here to add the calendar to another app.]

***Disclaimer: Information is subject to change. Please check with individual programs to verify the essay questions, instructions, and deadlines.***

Top MBA Essay Questions: How to Answer them Right!

Dartmouth Tuck MBA Class Profile: Class of 2022

Here is a look at Dartmouth Tuck’s class of 2022 profile, taken from the Tuck website.

Personal profile

  • Class of 2022 enrollment: 294
  • Average months of pre-MBA employment: 65
  • Students with partners: 25%
  • Students with children: 4%
  • Women: 46%
  • U.S. minorities (among all students): 21%
  • U.S. minorities (among U.S. students): 29%
  • International students: 41%

Students’ citizenship (dual citizens are counted in both countries)

  • U.S. and Canada: 70%
  • Asia: 20%
  • Europe: 8%
  • Latin America: 7%
  • Middle East and Africa: 4%
  • Oceania: <1%

Academic profile

Students currently holding an advanced degree: 11%

GPA

  • Average: 3.54
  • Range: 2.6 – 4.0

GMAT

  • Average: 724
  • Verbal average: 42
  • Quant average: 48
  • IR average: 7.0
  • Range: 600 – 780
  • Verbal range: 34 – 51
  • Quant range: 39 – 51

GRE

  • Verbal average: 162
  • Quant average: 162
  • Verbal range: 149 – 170
  • Quant range: 152 – 170
  • Percentage of students submitting GRE scores: 37%

Professional background

Consulting 25%
Financial services 20%
Technology 14%
Nonprofit, government 9%
Consumer goods, retail 8%
Other 7%
Healthcare, pharma, biotech 6%
Energy 5%
Media, entertainment 3%
Manufacturing 2%

Is Tuck the right school for you? Read these resources to help you decide and apply successfully:

Can you see yourself at Dartmouth Tuck? Learn how you can secure your spot when you work one-on-one with an expert Accepted advisor. Explore our MBA Admissions Services for more information on how we can help you get ACCEPTED!

Linda Abraham

By Linda Abraham, president and founder of Accepted. Linda earned her bachelors and MBA at UCLA, and has been advising applicants since 1994 when she founded Accepted. Linda is the co-founder and first president of AIGAC. She has written or co-authored 13 e-books on the admissions process, and has been quoted by The Wall Street JournalU.S. NewsPoets & QuantsBloomberg BusinessweekCBS News, and others. Linda is the host of Admissions Straight Talk, a podcast for graduate school applicants. Want an admissions expert to help you get accepted? Click here to get in touch!

This article originally appeared on blog.accepted.com