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  • Blog > Applications

How Students Can Use AI Responsibly During College Applications

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Empowerly

  • April 9, 2026

The college application process has always been stressful. Students have to manage essays, grades, deadlines, activities, recommendations, campus visits… all at once. What has changed this year is that AI is now in the mix. 

Over the last year, the use of AI in areas like essay idea generation, academic planning, college comparison, and reviewing material has picked up among students, while schools, counselors, and admissions departments are watching these activities more closely. Which means students have to be more sophisticated. 

We‘re not suggesting to stay away from AI altogether. Instead, we‘re suggesting to use it smartly and efficiently to save time,  help with learning, and keep your application real and yours.

Why responsible AI use matters more now

AI may be useful, but college applications cannot be reduced to getting the sentences to come out cleanly or to marks to come quickly.

Admissions officers are interested in how you think, what you care about and how you deal with problems. They are not searching for a cleaned up paragraph of faux text. They are searching for a real student voice.

That‘s where a responsible use comes into play. When AI is taking over the process it means that your application might sound flat, hesitant or impersonal. When AI is a support to your process it can function as a time-saving tool while still retaining your personality and experiences at its core.

What AI can do well for students

AI is best used as a support tool. It can make certain parts of application season easier and less stressful.

Here are some of the most useful ways students can use it:

Brainstorming essay topics

Most students are not struggling because they have no story. They are struggling because they have too many and don‘t know which one is a priority. That is when an AI can be most effective by generating a list of potential angles, themes, or memories to use. That can be just enough to break through the blank page.

Creating a first outline

Once you know your subject, AI can get you to a basic framework from fragmented pieces of notes. For example, you could get help with an opening, a critical transition and a closing. That does not mean it will take the writing for you. It means that it can assist you in streamlining your ideas.

Summarizing college research

While you are still gathering information comparing majors, programs, campus opportunities, the use of AI can be a time saver because it can produce “blanket” information more quickly. It works well at the beginning stage of narrowing down your list of schools or when you are considering writing supplemental essays.

Building a study routine

Application season coincides with the busy period of AP classes, AP exams, activities, and large projects. Using AI to establish study schedules, divide long assignments into manageable segments and keep up with busy schedules would be extremely beneficial to applicants.

Explaining tough academic concepts

This is especially helpful for students taking rigorous math and science classes while preparing applications. If you are trying to stay strong in AP Calculus, Algebra II, Statistics, or another demanding course, Math Solver can help you work through problems step by step so you understand the process instead of guessing your way through homework.

Where students get into trouble with AI

Most of the real problems begin when students stop using AI as a helper and start using it as a substitute.

Letting AI write the whole essay

This is the most important one. College essays should sound like someone. Not a machine. And even when the AI‘s grammatical output looks good, it still usually lacks the most important thing: your voice. Your perspective. Your voice. Your life experience. Your authenticity.

A fully AI-written essay can also get a little too polished, or too generic. It may answer the question, but it will be missing that distinctive quality that captures a reader‘s attention.

Using AI without checking facts

AI can bum. It can get deadlines wrong, abbreviate the wrong requirement or summarize a program incorrectly. This is why students should never go down the path of trusting AI as the ultimate prophet regarding any college, scholarship or admissions policy.

Submitting work that does not sound like you

Even if AI begins with what you said, the phrasing may be unnatural or awkward. If you‘d never say something like this aloud, it‘s not going to work in your application.

Relying on AI instead of learning

This is important not just in essays. If students employ AI to avoid actual thinking in academia, they may benefit today, but will impede themselves in the future. Quality applications require genuine gain, not shortcut behavior.

A simple rule for ethical AI use

A good test is this:

If AI helps you think, organize, or revise, it is probably being used well.
If AI is doing the thinking for you, it has gone too far.

That rule applies to essays, school assignments, interview prep, and even email communication with counselors or teachers.

How to use AI for essays the right way

The college essay is where students need the most caution. It is also where AI can still be helpful when used correctly.

Start with your own raw material

Before you open any of your tools, write down your memories, details, pivot moments, and learning. You do not need to polish anything; just have it be true: think about times you changed in some ways or were changed in others by a specific event.

Use AI for idea expansion, not authorship

When you have your notes, AI can prompt better questions. AI can come up with themes that may be implicit in your notes, or recognize repetitive elements, or even draw out areas that seem particularly ripe for development. And it‘s useful because it requires deeper thinking.

Write the draft yourself

This part matters. The actual essay should come from you. Your vocabulary does not need to sound perfect. Your sentences do not need to sound like a novelist. They just need to sound true.

Revise for clarity and voice

After you draft, you can use AI carefully to help with clarity. For example, if a paragraph feels awkward or repetitive, you can ask for ways to make it smoother. Some students also use tools like MyHumanizer to humanize robotic phrasing after AI-assisted brainstorming, but the goal should always be the same: make the writing sound more natural, not less personal.

Read the essay out loud

This is one of the best final checks. If a sentence feels strange when you say it out loud, it will probably feel strange to a reader too. Your essay should sound like the strongest, clearest version of you.

How AI can help with the rest of application season

Students often focus only on essays, but AI can also support the broader application process in ways that are genuinely practical.

Managing difficult coursework

Fall is one of the most intense times of high school. Students must simultaneously apply to colleges, while working to get excellent grades in AP classes, exams, and student government. AI can be utilized for explanation of concepts, for math problems and review sessions particularly for students trying to maintain their GPAs.

Preparing for interviews

AI can help students practice interview questions, think through school-specific answers, and rehearse talking about academic interests or extracurricular experiences.

Organizing deadlines

Application season is also in the mix personal statement and supplement essay deadlines, scholarship applications, recommendation requests, steps in financial aid, and test dates. AI can assist students in transforming that all into a believable timetable.

Improving time management

Students who are overwhelmed often waste time deciding what to do first. AI can help create priority lists, daily plans, and writing checklists that make the process feel more manageable.

Warning signs that AI use has gone too far

Students should pause and rethink their process if any of these signs appear:

  • the essay sounds generic enough that it could belong to anyone
  • you cannot explain why a sentence is in your essay
  • you are copying AI text directly into your application
  • the writing sounds much more formal than the way you normally speak
  • you are using AI to avoid doing the real reflection
  • you are trusting AI answers without checking official college information

If you notice these signs, pull back. Go back to your own notes, your own voice, and your own reasoning.

What admissions officers still care about most

Technology keeps changing, but the heart of college admissions has not changed as much as students sometimes think.

Colleges still care about:

  • intellectual curiosity
  • self-awareness
  • initiative
  • growth
  • clear communication
  • authentic voice

AI can help you present your work more clearly. It cannot replace the substance behind it.

This is even more relevant for selective schools. I am of the opinion that a student writing simply and personally will be far more effective than a student presenting a perfect but detached essay.

A responsible AI workflow for students

If you want a practical system, use this one:

Step 1: Think first

List your real experiences, challenges, goals, and questions before asking AI for anything.

Step 2: Use AI for structure

Ask for outlines, planning support, or study organization.

Step 3: Keep the core writing yours

Draft essays and short responses in your own words.

Step 4: Revise carefully

Use AI only to improve clarity, not to replace your voice.

Step 5: Verify everything

Check all facts, policies, deadlines, and school-specific details using official sources.

Step 6: Ask a human for feedback

A counselor, teacher, parent, or trusted mentor can often spot what feels off much faster than a tool can.

Final thoughts

AI isn‘t going to disappear, students don‘t need to pretend it does. In a proper manner,  AI can be used for brainstorming, studying,  managing time and reviewing during a hectic high school year. 

Nevertheless, appropriate use becomes of greater importance than ease of use. 

The application you submit is a reflection of your judgment, your work, and you. AI can augment the work, it should never supplant the work. The most proficient AI users are those who will not let the AI take over the work. They are the ones who will use it smart,  be honest about it, and still ensure the voice sounds like an actual human being, a person with a tale to tell.

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