| ED should be outlawed. Would be better for everyone (well, all students). |
But does it really matter that much? Frankly if the kid is choosing between two highly ranked schools…meh, they aren’t gonna ruin their life choosing one and just EDing. I think people place too much importance on this moment. |
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Many, many wealthy, high-performing students reside in California.
UCLA and UCB are phenomenal values for California residents. Many California residents will not apply ED, even if they can afford it, because it would foreclose the possibility of going in-state to UCLA or UCB. But because admissions to those schools are unpredictable, there will inevitably be many very high-performing California residents who don’t get in, and who are therefore available to be full pay at your east-coast school. But not if you take the whole class in ED. |
Same analysis also applies to Annapolis and West Point. Schools really don’t want to definitively close the door on applicants who are credible candidates for military academies. |
Stats? |
Nope. ED works like a charm for us and many in our situations -- HHI between 100k and 200k. We are thankful for the opportunities. |
It was a non-binding EA- but it didn’t allow him to apply to other privates early. |
What an absurd statement. No one is forcing your kids to apply ED anywhere. My kid, however, definitely wants to apply ED to his first-choice school. |
This |