I've been searching for hours but haven't been able to find a useful or remotely comprehensive list. It seems like Northwestern and Georgetown do in-person interviews, and Harvard, Columbia, and UChicago do videoconference interviews. Does anyone else know about the other schools? I mainly ask because I'm debating whether I should even apply to the schools that require in-person interviews, as I will be out of the country next winter/spring and wouldn't be able to fly back without the school actually subsidizing my travel.
Thanks in advance for any useful info!
EDIT: Probably easier to organize by school and update as we get info.
Harvard: Video interview
Yale: No interview
Stanford: No interview
Columbia: Video interview
Chicago: Video interview
Penn: ?? (their website says their admissions committee occasionally asks to interview candidates, but it seems uncommon)
NYU: No interview
Berkeley: No interview
Michigan: No interview
Virginia: Interview (phone? video? in-person?)
Northwestern: In-person interview
Georgetown: In-person group interview
Duke: ??
Cornell: ??
6 comments
Northwestern interviews but you have an option between in-person on-campus, in-person in a different area, or you can also do a video interview. Fyi. I believe the deadline has passed to request an in-person interview in your own area though. But video interviews are always accepted.
@pcoelho113 what kind of questions did they ask??
As far as Gtown is concerned, the dean showed interviewee some random applicants' applications(resume/essay) and asked if you would accept/reject based on the info.; then asked the reasoning for the decision.
If you gogole TLS with interview keywords, you can probably find more real interview questions from T14 applicants past cycles.
Hope that helps.
I did not have one from Michigan and got in. Had one from UVA though - all admitted students have to have an interview. Of course, plenty of people who are not admitted get interviewed, as well.
Georgetown is T-15 now:) I think it doesn't have interview.
Yale: No
Michigan, VA, Duke: yes (at least I did)
Cornell: Technically yes, but it's an online interview where you give them a combo of recorded video responses and short written essays. This was rather annoying since if the internet crapped out, you'd have to start the whole thing again.