Demonstrated Interest in the Digital Age: Beyond Campus Visits

Colleges want to admit students who genuinely want to attend their school. “Demonstrated interest” is how you show them you’re serious. Traditionally, this often meant visiting campus. But what if you live far away, can’t afford a trip, or a pandemic restricts travel? Good news: you can absolutely show college interest online. Learning effective virtual demonstrated interest strategies is key in today’s application process.
What is Demonstrated Interest and Does it Still Matter?
Demonstrated interest (DI) refers to the ways an applicant shows a college they are genuinely interested in attending. It helps colleges gauge the likelihood that an admitted student will actually enroll.
Does it still matter? For some colleges, yes, very much! Especially for many private colleges (often smaller ones) trying to manage their enrollment numbers (“yield”). For others, like large public universities or highly selective institutions that get tons of applications, it might matter less or not at all. It’s crucial to research each college’s stance. You can often find clues on their admissions website or by asking an admissions counselor.
Why Traditional Campus Visits Aren’t Always Possible
While visiting campus is great if you can do it, colleges understand it’s not feasible for everyone due to:
- Cost (travel, accommodation)
- Distance
- Time constraints (school, jobs, activities)
- Health concerns or accessibility issues
Colleges have adapted and now recognize many forms of online engagement as valid ways of how to show interest without visiting campus.
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Ways to Show Virtual Demonstrated Interest
Here are effective demonstrated interest strategies you can use from home:
- Engage with Their Website Thoroughly: Go beyond the homepage. Explore department pages for your potential major, read faculty bios, check out student life sections, and look at news/events.
- Sign Up for the Mailing List: Request information online. This officially puts you on their radar.
- Attend Virtual Information Sessions & Tours: Many colleges offer these online. Participate actively if there are Q&A opportunities.
- Attend Virtual College Fairs: Visit the college’s virtual booth, ask thoughtful questions.
- Open Their Emails (and Click Links!): Colleges often track email engagement. Opening emails and clicking relevant links shows you’re paying attention.
- Follow Official Admissions Social Media Accounts: Engage thoughtfully (like posts, maybe ask relevant questions – don’t spam). Use college engagement online platforms professionally.
- Contact Your Regional Admissions Counselor: If you have a genuine, specific question that isn’t easily answered on the website, send a polite, professional email. Introduce yourself briefly.
- Mention Specifics in Your “Why Us?” Essay: This is HUGE. Reference specific programs, professors, classes, clubs, or unique opportunities you learned about through your virtual research. This proves genuine interest.
- Apply Early Action or Early Decision (If appropriate): Applying ED is the ultimate expression of interest, but only do it if you are 100% sure it’s your top choice and financially feasible. EA also shows proactive interest.
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Making Online Engagement Meaningful (Not Annoying)
The key is quality, not just quantity.
- Be Authentic: Your interest should be genuine.
- Be Specific: Generic questions or comments don’t help much.
- Be Professional: Use proper grammar and tone in emails and online interactions.
- Be Respectful of Their Time: Don’t bombard counselors with emails you could answer yourself with a quick website search.
What Might Not Count as Meaningful Interest?
- Just liking every single social media post without substance.
- Sending generic emails asking basic questions found online.
- Following dozens of random student accounts.
- Contacting multiple different admissions officers with the same question.
Which Colleges Care Most About Demonstrated Interest?
- Generally Care More: Smaller private colleges, liberal arts colleges, schools where yield is a significant factor.
- Generally Care Less (or Not At All): Highly selective elite universities (they assume everyone is interested), large public universities receiving massive application numbers.
How to check? Look at the college’s “Common Data Set” (search online for “[College Name] Common Data Set”). Section C7 lists the relative importance of application factors, including “Level of applicant’s interest.”
Final Thought: Genuine Engagement is Key
Even if you can’t visit campus, you can effectively show college interest online. Focus on meaningful college engagement online through virtual events, thorough website research, and thoughtful communication. Let your genuine curiosity and enthusiasm for the specific college shine through your virtual demonstrated interest efforts.
Need more tips on college applications, scholarships, or just how to survive this whole process? Cirkled In has your back—check out Cirkled In resources to help you through every step of your college journey!
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