| They likely only ask because they are planning their acceptances numbers. |
Same for the school that doesn’t have you since you base school admissions on whether a parent informs a school or not of reasoning for school selection. |
Np- what a stupid comment. How about school stick to merits of students and not parent’s choice of informing. |
Then they wouldn’t ask specifically where they are attending if they just want it for acceptance numbers. |
Yeah, because that’s the measure of student being accepted. Okay, you, “lucky one.” |
I'd be honest. |
That’s the major difference. Your current school will not ask. If you find a way to tell them because they “asked” you asked them to ask |
| It depends. |
| It often leads to a deeper conversation as to why and what the applicant/family values to help admissions better sell their own school. I saw no downside in doing this but definitely spent more time with certain schools than others (based on prior relationship/legacy and/or how we were treated during the application process). From the parent side, it is simply part of being a decent human. |
What? We informed the schools that we were declining their offer. They send an email thanking us for informing them and asked where we decided to enroll and the reason. You think we should not have informed them that we were declining their offer? |
It is obvious that if one doesn’t enroll, they declined it. |
Exactly! It's just common decency to respond if they ask; you don't have to go into too much details. |
The schools could take that same approach and say if you don't hear from us that means you were not accepted. I don't see any downside in communicating your decision to the school. |
No, they have a system to tell all who applied and you know that. There is no system in which one has to decline and you know that as well. There is no downside in not communicating that to the school. |
Pp-that is not any school’s approach and paying for the application process is part of that. You are incorrect. |