| JHU definitely accepts some deferrals RD. They are not like Georgetown, which defers all kids not accepted EA. JHU rejects a good number of ED applicants. |
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First off, sorry for the result. No matter how much everyone understands the realities of very low acceptance rates and prepares for the disappointment it is still really hard.
I think he should put in the LOCI, probably would regret not trying, but then put it out of mind and focus on other possibilities. |
It may be true that JHU deferral is not a soft reject. Nonetheless admit rate for the deferral pool is comparable to RD pool (4-5%), maybe a little bit higher (5-6%?) but that's it. Focus on elsewhere. Detach. |
Similar boat here, too. Likely not going to ED2 anywhere and focus on the great opportunities they applied to EA and a few RD. |
| Deferral is hard, not the news anyone is hoping for. But it confirms competitiveness, and lead to greater RD options next year. |
| In 2023 JHU acceptance rate ~20% for ED1, ~10$ for ED2 and ~5% for RD. That has changed in the last 2 years, with 2023 acceptance rate for combined ED1 and ED2 at 10.5% and RD at 4.2%. Consider that about 800 are accepted in ED1 & ED2, and about 2,500 in RD. This means the ED2 still provide a significant advantage compared to RD. Around early Jan, after the deadline for ED2 and RD, JHU typically contacts select RD applicants and offer to switch them to ED2 with a simple 'yes' email. Presumably that is a signal of interest. All the above stats are for all majors at JHU, except for Biomedical Engineering, which only accepts about 100 students, majority from ED1 and some from ED2. |
| WashU accepts deferrals from ED. Almost 2/3 of admits are from the ED round. |
| This fall '25 WashU matriculated a record 1,963 students, 110+ more than in fall '24, many were added from the waitlist. This was the summer where there was uncertainty about international students ability to get U.S. visas. Turns out it was not an issue at WashU. Even with 6% more freshmen joining, WashU housing and academic ran smoothly. There are plans to build new housing in South 40 or at the former Fontbonne campus to provide enough capacity to house ALL freshmen and sophomore on campus. Wouldn't be surprise if class of '26 size will be at or bigger than class of '25 |
JHU ended the legacy policy in 2014. All NCAA varsity sports are Div 3, except for Lacrosse, Div 1. Aside from the moderate to strong athletic hook (depending on sport), there are very few hooks at JHU. The school runs similar admission policy as Caltech and MIT, i.e. meritocracy (academic combined with outstanding athletics/music) |
This has nothing to do with ED1 deferrals, they have ED once, and JHU can't switch them to ED2. |
| Pre-covid, JHU places ~15% ED pool on deferral. Not sure what is the current practice on deferral as no one is reporting data anymore. |
| Thanks everyone for the input. DC has decided it’s best to move on. He has a second choice for ED2 that he will be happy to attend and is less selective. Good luck to all the deferrals. |
| What's his ED2 school? What level? Did he stick with T20 or go down a level? |
Wow. That’s huge |
Can you provide any proof of this, or is it something you just “feel?” Typical DCUM bullshit. Treating anecdotes as facts. |