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rahulg
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AlexMBAApply
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minime2
Good point Alex.

However, in that case I think schools should refrain from giving feedback. Banal responses like "your GMAT was low" does more harm than good.

Which is precisely the main reason why the schools don't give feedback.

One other point that Alex didn't mention is time. Take a school like Kellogg. Each year, over 5,000 applicants don't get accepted. Even assuming only 50% of those people want feedback (which is probably on the low end), and that a feedback discussion would be 15 minutes (which also is probably on the low end), you're looking at over 600 hours of adcom time just devoted to giving feedback to rejected applicants. That's roughly equivalent to one full time adcom making phone calls every minute of the day during business hours for four months straight.

Even if adcom could give feedback that would be helpful - which they usually can't - it would place a huge burden on their resources, which just isn't worth the tiny, tiny blip they'd get from a PR perspective by doing it.
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Jerz

Which is precisely the main reason why the schools don't give feedback.


Well some schools (e.g. UNC and some others) do provide feedback. My point was that they shouldn't. As you said it does no good to the rejected applicant and wastes the adcom time.
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Jerz

Which is precisely the main reason why the schools don't give feedback.


Well some schools (e.g. UNC and some others) do provide feedback. My point was that they shouldn't. As you said it does no good to the rejected applicant and wastes the adcom time.

What makes you think that ad coms give false feedback? Did someone with a 720 actually receive feedback that their score was too low or was that a hypothetical comment?

Also, is the feedback initiated by the school or on the applicant's request?
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staind



What makes you think that ad coms give false feedback? Did someone with a 720 actually receive feedback that their score was too low or was that a hypothetical comment?

Also, is the feedback initiated by the school or on the applicant's request?

I don't think adcoms give false feedback. I was responding to Alex point (2) where he said that the adcoms might be unwilling to say something because it is hurful(but true).

Someone with 720 was told that the score was average and a higher score would have helped. I dont know who initiated the feedback request. Check out UNC's wesite to see how the feedback is initiated.
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On the topic of adcoms, this is a popular thread:

bad-attitude-41610.html