IB Diploma: Personal Statement, Common App, Parcoursup — adapting your application to 3 systems
One academic journey, three different files. How an IB student adapts their application to UCAS, Common App, and Parcoursup without drowning.
Constantin Mardoukhaev
Co-founder, Axiom Academic · Published on 7 April 2026
9 min read
Contents
- The three systems at a glance
- Trap #1: recycling the same text
- How to approach UCAS as an IB student
- What UK universities love about an IB profile
- Recommended Personal Statement structure for an IB candidate
- How to approach Common App as an IB student
- What US universities love about an IB profile
- The IB × Common App trap
- How to approach Parcoursup as an IB student
- The particularity: you’re not a « standard » applicant
- Recommended Parcoursup letter structure for an IB candidate
- The calendar for applying to all three systems
- The advice I give every multi-system IB candidate
- Key takeaways
- Going further
If you’re in the IB Diploma Programme and considering applying to the United Kingdom, the United States, and France in parallel, you face a problem few students encounter: three radically different admission systems, each expecting a different version of you.
The UCAS Personal Statement has nothing in common with the Common App essays, which themselves have nothing in common with the Parcoursup motivation letter. And yet, it’s the same student, the same path, the same experiences, simply told with different codes.
This article is an operational guide to adapting your application to all three systems without drowning and without betraying who you are.
The three systems at a glance
| 🇬🇧 UCAS (UK) | 🇺🇸 Common App (USA) | 🇫🇷 Parcoursup (France) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central piece | Personal Statement (4,000 characters) | Personal Essay (650 words) + Supplements | Projet de Formation Motivé (1,500 characters per wish) |
| Expected tone | Academic, structured, subject-focused | Personal, narrative, identity-focused | Sober, clear, project-focused |
| What’s valued | Academic exploration beyond the curriculum | Personal maturity, resilience, originality | Profile-programme fit, coherence |
| Number of choices | 5 universities | ~15-20 universities (unlimited in theory) | 10 wishes + 10 sub-wishes |
| Main deadline | 15 January (mid-October for Oxbridge) | 1 January (Early Nov, Regular Jan) | Mid-March (confirmation early April) |
| Recommendations | 1 reference (teacher/counsellor) | 2-3 recommendation letters | Fiche Avenir from the homeroom teacher |
Trap #1: recycling the same text
The first error I see from IB students applying to all three systems: writing one text and superficially adapting it for each platform.
It doesn’t work. Here’s why:
- The UCAS Personal Statement must be 80% academic. You talk about the subject, what you’ve read/explored/understood beyond the curriculum. If you tell your personal story, you’re off-topic.
- The Common App Personal Essay must be 80% personal. You tell a moment, an experience, a reflection that says something deep about who you are. If you talk about your grades or Extended Essay, you’re missing the point.
- The Parcoursup letter must be 100% project. You explain why you’re targeting this specific programme, how your profile fits. No personal story, no academic discourse. Just the fit between you and the programme.
Three texts, three angles, three registers. It’s a lot of work, but it’s the rule of the game.
How to approach UCAS as an IB student
What UK universities love about an IB profile
British universities know the IB well and respect it. Your predicted IB score (32-45 points) is directly readable for them, no conversion needed. What they particularly value:
- Your Extended Essay: if the topic relates to the target field, it’s a powerful argument for the Personal Statement. « I wrote a 4,000-word Extended Essay on X, and that research led me to question Y. »
- Your HL/SL combination: selective universities check your Higher Levels. Targeting engineering? They want Math HL + Physics HL. Targeting law? They want English HL or History HL.
- Your CAS doesn’t interest most UK universities much (unlike US ones). Put it in the complementary activities section, not in the body of the Personal Statement.
Recommended Personal Statement structure for an IB candidate
- Hook: an observation related to the subject (not a personal narrative)
- Extended Essay + academic exploration (~60% of the text): what you’ve done beyond the IB programme, what you gained, the question it opened
- Theory of Knowledge: if your TOK topic relates to the field, 2-3 sentences showing your critical thinking
- Complementary activities (~20%): CAS only if field-relevant
- Conclusion: what you expect from university, forward-looking
How to approach Common App as an IB student
What US universities love about an IB profile
American universities love the IB. The IB programme is perceived as one of the most rigorous curricula in the world, and a high score (36+) is a very clear signal of academic strength. But they don’t stop there. They also want to know who you are.
What they particularly value:
- Your CAS (Creativity, Activity, Service): US universities want evidence of extracurricular engagement. Your CAS is exactly that. Develop it in the Common App « Activities » section.
- Your Personal Essay: a literary, personal essay of 650 words. It is NOT a narrative CV. It’s a moment, a perspective, a reflection that reveals your personality. The IB trained you to write analytical essays. Here, it’s an introspective essay.
- Your Supplements: each university asks for 1-3 additional essays (200-400 words) on specific topics (« Why this university? », « Tell us about a challenge… »). This is where you personalise per university.
The IB × Common App trap
IB students tend to write Personal Essays that are too analytical, like a TOK essay. Common App expects the opposite: emotion, concrete detail, sensory specifics, narrative. If your essay starts with « In this essay, I will discuss… », you’re in the wrong register.
Tip: pick a precise moment (not an abstract theme) and tell it with enough detail that the reader sees the scene. Then draw the broader lesson. It’s storytelling, not analysis.
How to approach Parcoursup as an IB student
The particularity: you’re not a « standard » applicant
An IB student applying on Parcoursup is in a grey zone. Parcoursup is designed for French Bac students. The IB Diploma is recognised, but admission panels don’t read it as easily as a French transcript (where they see class averages, rankings, teacher comments in a familiar format).
What you must do:
- Provide an equivalence attestation or official translation of your IB transcripts
- Clearly explain in your motivation letter what the IB is (in 1-2 sentences, since many Parcoursup panels don’t know it in detail)
- Highlight your predicted HL scores (these are the equivalent of your French spécialités)
- Explain how your Extended Essay and TOK demonstrate your research and critical thinking capacity
Recommended Parcoursup letter structure for an IB candidate
The Parcoursup letter is short (1,500 characters, ~250 words). No room for storytelling. Structure:
- Who I am (1-2 sentences): IB student, school, city, predicted score
- Why this programme (~40% of text): how it matches my project, what I concretely expect
- Why my profile fits (~40% of text): HL choices, Extended Essay if relevant, experiences proving the fit
- Opening (1-2 sentences): what I want to do with this programme, no empty formulas
The calendar for applying to all three systems
| Month | UCAS (UK) | Common App (USA) | Parcoursup (France) |
|---|---|---|---|
| September | Start Personal Statement | Start Personal Essay + supplements | — |
| October | Finalise PS, Oxbridge deadline (mid-Oct) | Submit Early Action/Decision (1 Nov) | — |
| November | Final PS iterations | Regular Decision iterations | — |
| December | Submit before Christmas (optimal) | — | — |
| January | 15 January: UCAS deadline | 1 January: Regular deadline | Parcoursup opens, wish entry |
| February-March | Receive conditional offers | Receive decisions (March-April) | Write Parcoursup letters |
| Mid-March | — | — | Wish entry deadline |
| Early April | — | — | Confirmation deadline |
| May | Choose firm/insurance | Choose university (1 May) | — |
| July | IB results → UK confirmation | — | IB results → admission phase |
Critical point: IB results come out in early July. That’s later than the French Bac (late June). If your UK offers are conditional on a 36+ IB score, you’ll have to wait until July to know if you’re confirmed. Guaranteed stress.
The advice I give every multi-system IB candidate
Start with UCAS, finish with Parcoursup. The Personal Statement is the longest and most demanding piece (4,000 characters, 15 versions). Common App comes naturally after because you’ve already reflected on your journey. Parcoursup comes last (mid-March) and requires a different but shorter exercise. If you reverse the order, you risk botching the Personal Statement, and it’s the one that makes the difference.
Key takeaways
- Three systems = three distinct texts. Never recycle the same text.
- UCAS wants academic content (80% subject). Common App wants personal content (80% who you are). Parcoursup wants fit (100% project).
- The IB is very well recognised by all three systems — but you need to explain your IB profile to Parcoursup (which knows it less well).
- Extended Essay + TOK are your distinctive assets for UCAS and Parcoursup. CAS is your asset for Common App.
- Start with UCAS (earliest deadline, longest text), finish with Parcoursup.
Going further
- UCAS Personal Statement: the structure that works in 2026
- The France + UK dual application, step by step
- Should you apply abroad alongside Parcoursup?
Article written by Constantin Mardoukhaev, co-founder of Axiom Academic. Constantin supports IB students each year in the simultaneous preparation of UCAS, Common App, and Parcoursup applications.
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