What Must Be Done Before August 1?
| Task | Deadline | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Personal statement – near-final draft | Late July | Frees August-October for 8-15 supplemental essays |
| School list finalized (10-12 schools) | Mid-July | Determines which supplements to write and ED/EA strategy |
| Teacher recommenders asked | Before school ends (May-June) | Teachers asked in May write better letters than those asked in September |
| Activities list complete (all 10 slots) | Late July | Strong action verbs and quantified impact take time to craft |
| Common App account created, demographics filled | August 1-7 | Eliminates administrative work from the fall crunch |
| SAT/ACT final score in hand (or August test date set) | June-August | Score determines school list calibration and whether to go test-optional |
| Supplement outlines for top 5 schools | Late July | Head start on “Why This School” essays using prior-year prompts |
Source: Oriel Admissions application timeline; College Board Common App guidelines.
How Should June Be Spent?
June is foundation month. The three priorities are: formally asking recommenders (if not already done in May) and providing each teacher with a detailed context document, taking the June SAT or ACT if a final attempt is needed, and beginning the personal statement. For essay writing, June is for brainstorming and first drafts. Your child should identify 3-5 potential essay topics, write rough drafts of the most promising 2-3, and select the strongest direction by month’s end. Do not try to polish in June – get the raw material on paper. For the full admissions timeline, see our month-by-month calendar.
What Should July Look Like?
July is refinement and completion month. The personal statement should go through at least two more drafts, moving from raw story to structured narrative to polished prose. The school list should be finalized by mid-July based on a realistic assessment of your child’s testing, GPA, and extracurricular profile relative to each school’s admitted student data. Once the school list is set, your child should begin deep research on each school – reading student newspapers, exploring departmental websites, identifying specific professors, programs, or opportunities that connect to their interests. This research fuels the “Why This School” supplemental essays that will be written in August and September.
The activities list should also be completed in July. Each of the 10 Common App slots should use strong action verbs, quantify impact where possible, and describe the activity in a way that an admissions officer who knows nothing about your child’s school can understand. This is harder than it sounds and takes multiple revisions. See our activities list writing guide.
What Happens After August 1?
If the pre-August checklist is complete, August through October becomes focused supplemental essay writing and application finalization. A student applying to 10-12 schools will typically need to write 8-15 supplemental essays in addition to their personal statement. With the personal statement, activities list, and school list already done, your child can devote full attention to these school-specific essays – which are often the most important differentiators in the admissions process. For schools with November 1 ED/EA deadlines, the goal is to have all materials submitted by October 20-25 to avoid last-minute scrambling. See our supplemental essay guide.
Final Thoughts
The summer before senior year is the most consequential 10 weeks in the college admissions process. The families who use it well – completing the personal statement, finalizing the school list, securing recommenders, and building the activities list before August 1 – enter senior year with the confidence and bandwidth to produce excellent supplemental essays and submit applications ahead of deadline. The families who procrastinate spend September through January in a state of controlled panic, producing rushed work under maximum pressure. The choice is made now.
At Oriel Admissions, our former admissions officers from Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia work with rising seniors through the summer to ensure every component is complete, compelling, and strategically optimized before the fall deadlines arrive. Schedule a consultation to build your summer application plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
Four things: a polished personal statement (3+ drafts, reviewed by at least one experienced reader), a finalized school list of 10-12 schools calibrated by acceptance rate into reaches/targets/likelies, two teacher recommenders formally asked with detailed context provided, and a complete activities list with all 10 slots filled using strong action verbs. These four items represent 80% of the application work. If they are done before school starts, your child’s senior fall can focus on supplemental essays and school-specific materials rather than scrambling on fundamentals.
Minimum three substantive drafts. The first draft gets the story on paper. The second restructures for narrative arc and trims excess. The third polishes language, ensures the opening hooks the reader, and confirms the essay reveals something genuine about your child that is not visible elsewhere in the application. Many successful essays go through 5-7 drafts. The key is to start in June and have a near-final version by late July, leaving August for supplemental essays. See our Common App essay guide.
Before the school year ends – ideally May or early June. Teachers who are asked in September are often overwhelmed with requests and produce generic letters. Teachers who are asked in May have the summer to write thoughtfully. When asking, provide each teacher with a one-page document that includes: your child’s academic goals, specific moments in that teacher’s class that were meaningful, and the types of schools your child is applying to. This context produces specific, compelling letters rather than boilerplate praise. See our recommendation letter guide.
June: finalize recommender requests, begin personal statement drafting, take a final SAT/ACT if needed (June test date), and complete any remaining extracurricular commitments or summer projects. July: revise personal statement through multiple drafts, research schools deeply to prepare for supplemental essays, begin outlining ‘Why This School’ essays for top-choice schools, create the Common App account and fill in all demographic and academic sections, and finalize the activities list. By August 1, the only remaining work should be supplemental essays and final polishing.
Yes, if your current score is below the 25th percentile of your target schools. Most selective schools now require testing (Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Brown, Dartmouth have all reinstated requirements), and a score improvement of 50-100 points on the SAT can meaningfully change your competitiveness. August and October are viable final test dates for EA/ED applications due November 1-15. However, if your score is already at or above the median for your target schools, your time is better spent on essays. See our SAT vs ACT guide.
A balanced list typically includes 2-3 likely schools (acceptance rate 40%+ OR your child’s stats are well above the median), 4-5 target schools (acceptance rate 15-35%, your child’s stats are at or near the median), and 3-4 reach schools (acceptance rate below 15%). Every school on the list should be one your child would genuinely attend if admitted – there should be no ‘throwaway’ applications. Include a mix of school types (liberal arts and research universities) and consider geographic diversity. See our school list guide.
Yes – for schools that reuse prompts year to year (most do). Many supplemental prompts, especially ‘Why This School’ essays, remain consistent across cycles. Your child can begin researching and outlining these essays in July using last year’s prompts. When the official 2027-2028 prompts are released (typically late July/early August), your child will only need to adjust rather than start from scratch. For EA/ED schools with November 1 deadlines, having supplement outlines ready by August 1 is a significant advantage. See our ‘Why Us’ essay guide.
Waiting until August to start everything. The families who produce the weakest applications are those who treat summer as vacation and begin essay writing, school list building, and recommender outreach in September. By then, teachers are overwhelmed, essay quality suffers from time pressure, and the student is simultaneously managing senior year coursework, applications, and testing. The families who produce the strongest applications treat June and July as the primary application preparation window and enter senior year with most of the heavy lifting done.