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Learn which schools value demonstrated interest and get that done in junior year/summer.
Way too late to start in senior year. |
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-Despite the various types of early admissions (EA, ED1, ED2, SCEA, REA etc.), many are still waiting for their regular round outcomes in March to make the final decision.
-My kid only applied to schools from the top 50, so he had do over a dozen applications to play safe. Looking back, he could have applied to fewer schools with a more targeted approach to save time and money (e.g., pick safeties that don’t require supplementals). |
| Fewer, and targeted applications. Only apply to safety/likely that you could see yourself at. If your kid doesn’t want you to read essays or “manage” the process, respect that. If they want more support, try to help. Remind them often that you love them and that their worth is not tied to their college (or GPA, SAT, etc). |
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Don't feel pressured to apply anywhere ED1 or ED2. EA, REA and rolling admission are all great options.
Don't apply to 3+ safeties. 2 safeties that your DC would be happy to attend is sufficient. Too many applications leads to burnout. Take a trip with your DC that is not college related just to have fun, even if it's only for a long weekend 1:1 and bond and tell them you love them and are proud of them while you are waiting for decisions. |
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Definitely apply to Canadian universities! McGill and UofT don't require any essays, just scores and UofT asks for an activity list.
UBC is phenomenal but does require several supplemental essays, FYI. If you want to study econ, try for the elite international economics degree cohort at Vancouver School of Economics/UBC. It's very exclusive (only 100 spots) but you get a lot of extra perks. |
Ha. They aren’t lesser than Vandy. |
Or pick safeties that don’t require demonstrated interest. |
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Literally everyone here will tell you not to ED to WASP if not FGLI or recruited athlete.
But non hooked regular smart kids get in ED. If it’s the first choice, and kid is competitive, don’t discourage from EDing |
Agree. |
True. Our high stats DC applied ED to Pomona and did not get in. There was no real other candidate DC was that excited about, so we told her to acknowledge it was a high reach simply because it's a tiny school with few spots available for anyone - and DC is not FGLI or going in with the heavy hook of sports recruit. It was fine, because she wasn't giving up anything, as DC otherwise was only going to apply EA/RD to all the others. In hindsight it still was a waste of time to get hopes up and I rather would have spent time on targets. |
Firmly disagree. Once you’ve completed the common app, another safety school costs nothing but the application fee. A deluge of rejections feels miserable. Apply to 1 safety for every reach. |
I disagree. My child spent about $600 on 6 safeties (Vermont, Clemson, Pitt, UGA, Wisconsin, etc) and wish they had stopped at Pitt and called it a day. There was just no point and wasted our money and their time and the admission's person time. Plus it cluttered up the field for classmates who really wanted to attend those schools. My kid ended up wit a LOT of rejections in RD but the safety admits didn't really ameliorate this at all..... getting into UGA didn't make them feel better about being rejected form Dartmouth or Penn |
NP. I disagree. Getting the early merit $$$ admits from Pitt, Case, Vermont, CU-Boulder and Elon showed DC they had a very compelling app. So when deferred from their private T20 ED1, they DID NOT ED2. Instead, doubled down on RD reach - and ended up getting into 4 T20. It was well worth it as a "sign" and for confidence. DC felt extremely good about the process and had high self-esteem. Even with multiple March rejections..... |
Agree with this on the deluge of rejections. I think having a bunch of early YESes makes the process feel better. |
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I hadn’t considered the psychological benefits of safety yeses early in the process. That’s a good point. Also the PP who said it helped direct their ED2/RD decision.
I still recommend to my kids that they only need ONE actual, true safety that they would be happy to go to (based on my two oldest’s experiences) but I do see the points made here. |