If UVA is first choice….

Anonymous
Michigan
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My Ds has W&M as his ED2


Not sure it makes sense. ED doesn’t boost you much at W&M.


Yes it does.
Anonymous
William & Mary also
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My Ds has W&M as his ED2


Not sure it makes sense. ED doesn’t boost you much at W&M.


Really? Seems like it’s about a 7-point bump from 33-40%
Anonymous
Michigan
Anonymous
South Carolina
Anonymous
Michigan, W&M. Also in at Pitt business.
Anonymous
Texas
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My Ds has W&M as his ED2


Not sure it makes sense. ED doesn’t boost you much at W&M.


Really? Seems like it’s about a 7-point bump from 33-40%


Also ED1 UVA, ED2 W&M. It makes sense because any other more selective ED2 option will be a lot more expensive for us and it is actually the kid's 2nd choice.
Anonymous
USC and Michigan.
Anonymous
Michigan or VT
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My Ds has W&M as his ED2


Not sure it makes sense. ED doesn’t boost you much at W&M.


Really? Seems like it’s about a 7-point bump from 33-40%


As I said, not much. If you weren’t going to make the 33% you wouldn’t make the 40% either.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:South Carolina


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My Ds has W&M as his ED2


Not sure it makes sense. ED doesn’t boost you much at W&M.


Really? Seems like it’s about a 7-point bump from 33-40%


As I said, not much. If you weren’t going to make the 33% you wouldn’t make the 40% either.


Anecdote because it's just one school but when I look at SCOIR for my daughter's Catholic school for the last 3 years, average accepted GPA for ED and RD is the same, average SAT for RD is 50 pts higher than for ED, and % accepted for ED is 64% while RD is 35%. On the scattergram, there are blue waitlisted circles that were RD that are entirely surrounded by green ED circles. Probably best to look at SCOIR for your child's specific school to see if there's a big difference and where your child falls compared to their school's averages before deciding whether ED matters or doesn't. NP.
Anonymous
Colgate
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