First of all, admissions might have different reactions to essays. What one things is clever, another might find off-putting. Second, different recommendations may go to different schools. Some admissions officers might pick up on things that others don’t. |
That’s why they call safeties. A student will not choose Michigan if they are holding tickets to more selective schools. OP’s question is are students actually rejected from safeties and get into their more selective school choices. And the answer appears to be in the affirmative. |
| Have your students been rejected from safeties even if they visited the safeties and demonstrated interest in other ways? |
| Handful of waitlist at Maryland when, by stats, should have been a safety. |
| My daughter was accepted at MIT, Vandy, UCLA and UC-Berkeley, but not at UMich (I know none of those schools are really "safeties" but we were a bit surprised.) |
| Looking back several years of data ... every student who applied to University of Minnesota from our HS was rejected, until someone applied who had actually visited. They got in. |
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It comes down to the definition of safety. In my world, if the student is not certain to be admitted, then it can't be a safety. My rule of thumb would be >50% acceptance rate with stats >75th percentile.
Sometimes posters seem to confuse a low match/target with what is truly safe. State schools often make useful safeties because they tend to weigh on objective stats rather than additional factors. If the flagship is too selective for safety territory, then look at other state schools. Personally, I think it's unwise to rely on Naviance scattergrams that present a different picture from the school's published stats. Speaking of stats, stay away from third-party click-bait sites. Stick to the college's own site for data and possibly https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/. |
| Mine got into engineering at UMD (also honor program), University of IL Urbana Champaign, CMU, and others with honors program acceptance and yet was not invited into the honors program at UMBC. She got in everywhere but the rejection for honors at UMBC really surprised us. |
| Lack of demonstrated interest. If you don't have alum parents, never visited campus, never paid for a summer camp, and your "why ___?" essay is surface level bulls***, odds are you're NOT going to college 1,000 miles away from home, you're just shotgunning blasting the app. |
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It happened to me (I was a freshman in 1999). I was accepted at Harvard and rejected by CU Boulder.
I was a strong student, but my guidance counselor and parents had been preparing me to be rejected by Harvard, and my dad had gotten me some CU Boulder tee shirts and folders when we visited in May. He didn't buy me any Harvard merchandise when we visited because, he said later, he was sure I would be rejected and was uncomfortable with how strongly I had set my heart on Harvard. I still wore the CU Boulder tees while running along the Charles
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Yes, DD was accepted at her dream school, an ivy, and rejected by several safety schools she applied to.
A teammate of my son was rejected from his safeties, rejected at his reach, and had to scramble to submit to those with rolling admissions and open spaces this past Spring. He’s at WVU this fall and according to his mom, happy but still planning on applying to transfer. |
It's not a real safety unless it's a one-page application on the college's website where you self-report all the scores and they have a rolling two-week turnaround.
Seriously, though, it was a great feeling for DC to have an admit in hand even before senior year started. |
Ugh this makes me nervous. My DS's first choice school is a "safety school" (fits most of the description in 18:44.) He definitely has the stats to get into something "higher"--but this is the school he wants and feels is the best fit. He knows a few current students at the school so he's been to visit a few times, gone to football games, etc. but has never gone on an "official campus tour." I told him he might want to but he insisted he's been on campus enough times to have got a good feel for it. He did go to a summer camp there over the summer so hopefully that will help with "demonstrated interest?" He applied last week so I guess we should know in the next couple weeks if the lack of official campus tour has ruined his chances. |
UMBC Honors is for the cream of the crop. Those people typically can go anywhere in the country, either as an undergrad or a grad. Not surprised by the rejection. |
| This was 20 years ago but my brother got into an Ivy (reach, clearly) and waitlisted at UVA (he was a TJHSST graduate so I guess they had met their quote from there already) |