Tufts Deferred You: Now What?

 
 

Submit a letter of continued interest as soon as possible, and afterward, have your guidance counselor call or at least email the admissions office to update them concerning all of your awards, publications, accomplishments, and grades since you applied. They should affirm that no matter what other admission decisions you receive, you will choose to attend Tufts if offered a spot.

But not just any letter of continued interest. This letter should be one of the most inspired pieces of writing you've ever composed. In it, you need to let your heart write a love song for Tufts and translate that into giving the reader a concrete picture of exactly who you will be as a person on their campus. This includes demonstrating how you will contribute to spaces and organizations on campus and reminding the reader of your academic hook. In reintroducing your hook, the academic niche you spent time and effort carving out in high school to distinguish yourself from others, you want to remind the reader how you can change the world for the better if you have the opportunity to leverage specific academic opportunities at Tufts.

I personally recommend starting the letter of continued interest with something funny or lighthearted. It is naturally awkward reading something from someone whom you, in a sense, rejected. To make the experience as cringe-free as possible for the admissions officer, I wouldn't reference the rejection explicitly or convey any feelings of disappointment.

After a lighthearted and positive introduction, I would then proceed to talk to the reader about something related to your niche, such as a new cutting-edge development or something new that you learned. I would then connect this new piece of information regarding your niche to something currently going on at Tufts and explain how, by leveraging certain opportunities there, you can achieve some goal, and make the reader understand how achieving this goal can change the world.

Afterward, I would paint them a picture of you on their campus. Have fun here. Feel free to write a hypothetical scenario of you making some of the best memories of your life there. You want the reader to feel like by not admitting you, they will be denying you the opportunity to live your best life for four years. Show them you doing activities that have garnered you friends in high school on their campus. Show them how your hobbies or talents will brighten up the days of your Tufts classmates. Present yourself as someone they want on their campus.

To conclude the letter, I would thank the reader for their time and add something to the effect of thanking them for the opportunity to share with them your favorite subjects and hobbies. Finally, I would tell them that no matter what other decisions you receive, you are absolutely resolute in attending Tufts, and that if you are offered a seat, you will immediately accept it no matter what. I would then include a signed signature.

Ensure the letter is addressed to your regional admissions officer. Unlike some schools, Tufts doesn't publicly list regional assignments, so you'll need to identify yours by recalling which counselor visited your high school or by emailing undergraduate.admissions@tufts.edu to ask. You can view the full Tufts Admissions Team to match a name to a face. Submit your letter via your Applicant Status Page or email it directly to your regional officer.

When it comes to bragging about grades, prizes, or publications, please save it. If you made it this far in the admissions process at an elite school like Tufts, then you already have enough academic credentials to be a strong candidate. If you did not, then you wouldn't be deferred and reevaluated in the regular decision round, you would have been rejected.

Your guidance counselor should be the one bragging on your behalf. When they do it, it carries much more weight and shows the colleges that there is something beyond those accomplishments to consider. By your guidance counselor going out of their way to share your accomplishments with the admissions officer, it demonstrates to them that there is something compelling enough about your personhood for them to be doing this. Given how accomplished you must be to be even deferred from a school as selective as Tuftsm with its roughly 10% acceptance rate this intangible quality they can infer is what will distinguish you from other overachievers.

One more thing to keep in mind: Tufts considers demonstrated interest when evaluating applicants. This makes your letter of continued interest especially important. A compelling letter that reinforces your genuine enthusiasm for Tufts can make a meaningful difference in how your application is reconsidered during the Regular Decision round.

If you'd like help writing your letter of continued interest for Tufts or any other school, please schedule a free consultation with us below.

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