How to keep track of your college applications

In the following article, CollegeAdvisor.com Admissions Expert Kim Phan (Harvard ‘21) shares tips on how to keep track of your college applications. For more guidance on the college applications process in general, sign up for a monthly plan to work with an admissions coach 1-on-1.

Congratulations—you’ve got your college list! Now, it’s time to buckle down and begin those applications. Where do I start? Should I begin requesting recommendations from my teachers? How many essays do I need to write? The checklists that each school provides for their applications can seem overwhelming at first. However, one way to keep calm and make progress is to get organized. Here are a few ways to keep track of your college applications and all of their components:

Create a college applications spreadsheet:

Using your application of choice (Excel, Google Sheets), create a spreadsheet to help you track your colleges, their application requirements, and how far along you are in the process of completing these requirements.

At the most basic level, your spreadsheet headers — the top row(s) — should include key information about each college and its application requirements. Start by creating a column for final application deadline(s), which may reflect the dates for Early Action submission, Regular Decision, or Rolling Admissions. You may also want to indicate which of those admissions rounds you are planning to enter, and make sure that you either bold the application deadline that applies to you or denote this specification in some other visible way. The last thing you want is to accidentally miss the final submission date!

Next, consider creating columns that represent each of the college’s application components, such as recommendation letter requirements, application supplement essays, test score submissions, interviews, and financial aid. Some other questions you might consider are whether or not the school tracks prospective students’ “demonstrated interest” through correspondence or campus visits and what the application fee is.

Finally, it’s great to have a column titled something along the lines of “Application Submitted” that you can check off when your application is in!

For each of the major components of a college application, consider the following questions:

Depending on how relevant each question is to you, you might want to consider creating sub-columns that allow you to be more granular in tracking the progress of your application.

Recommendation letters: