It definitely is at GDS. They very rarely outright reject applicants. |
Yes I think it helped that another kid from the same K-8 declined their spot so an even swap plus one more. |
9th. Total entry year. |
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There is always room for a kid they want.
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I'm glad you found a place. I believe these things always work out. |
You need to attend the school for two weeks to have it kick in |
Sorry, but this is hard to believe. If true, there must have been a very unique circumstance presented by your family for two of the three schools to have accepted your son at this late date. |
Yes, we have a super unique story as a family as does our son. I won’t explain here because it would totally give us away, but I don’t expect that most families would have the same outcome us. However, I will say that applying off cycle did, I feel, give us a little more individualized attention than we received during the regular cycle. We felt like the schools in the off cycle truly tried to get to know our boy. Of course because admissions teams are much less swamped, but it also just seemed much more straight forward. |
Not that hard to believe they were accepted late. We’ve had kids come into our private mid year, even some as late as Feb. There is more wiggle room than you’d think when it comes do class sizes. Especially for the right family |
We experienced a marginally different version of this a few years ago. We applied off cycle, had a totally white glove process and received admissions decisions within a week or so of applying. It really does happen and probably more often than we assume. |
| Can I assume if a family does not request any financial aid, the child is more likely to come off the wait list? |
But the strange part is that they were obviously very desirable to these schools, and not at all to the original 3 schools. Why do you think that was? |
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Call admissions offices directly.
The political and economic turbulence could very well lead to more late spots in schools than normal years. |
100% I am shocked by how far the scales tip in favor of non FA families. If you need financial aid going into this game, your kid better be a Jimmy Neutron who in his spare time started his own 503C foundation to save whales off the coast of Mongolia |
As the OP family in question, I think it also comes down to fit for 1. Secondly, we applied for financial aid at these schools during the cycle and I think that definitely hurt us. Off cycle we didn’t. Grandparents on both sides read the room and saw that if our kid was going to get in, we needed to NOT ask for aid. Not saying it was the only factor, but here we are with 2 acceptances at schools with active waitlists. And might I add, that one of these schools was on us sending emails every couple of days to see where we were in the application submission process. Almost as if they were actively courting us. I couldn’t believe it. Nothing like that occurred during the cycle. |