REA applications are NOT binding and there is NOTHING from any of these schools to indicate they expect you to choose them if they accept you. |
Well, it's just sh%^ty to get a Yale acceptance and then continue to apply to Ivies. It's common knowledge that your greatest competition is other kids from your own high school. A common max number of Ivy spots given to any one DC school in recent years has often 2 or even 1. Gone are the days (if it's even true) of 11 Yale spots. I'm sure the kid with the Yale acceptance had MANY friends/classmates who were sitting on zero decent acceptances prior to regular decision. But screw these kids--- they went ahead and tossed in their highly competitive application regardless of what it would mean for to their classmates. I get that this didn't break any legal rule but you won't convince me (or most other decent humans) that it wasn't crappy and low. |
“Decent” acceptances? Do you mean Ivy? Didn’t people know going in that the competition would be fierce and they would be competing with their classmates? No one is entitled to a “decent” acceptance. |
Agree. How many would still bother to apply to another school in RD if they already got accepted by Yale or Harvard in SCEA? Picked Yale/Harvard for EA, got in and then regretted?
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Just curious, do you have kids a SFS? |
Not ethical? Please. Sour grapes. |
What are we, socialists? |
I am definitely a decent human and do not believe there is anything "unethical" about a kid being accepted to any Ivy REA and then choosing to submit other applications. REA is specifically NOT BINDING, and an 18 year old kid is very entitled to be unsure of what they want or change their mind over the course of their senior year. This idea that there is a max number of spots allocated to any school is false - and even when asked to cite any source for this, you have not. I am the PP that knows for a fact that 11 kids from the Sidwell class of 2015 went to Yale. Yes, this was pre-covid and the admissions landscape has certainly changed, but that does not mean there are school quotas that were just reduced to "2 or even 1." For example, five boys from STA were admitted to Yale in 2022 - is this recent enough for you to acknowledge your quota claims are ridiculous? |
No, at another Big3. So far straight As through first quarter of junior year. I guess if the private school community is about every man for him/herself we can play that game too. I hope those of you encouraging this behavior have kids with very top grades. |
It is possible 10 STA kids applied to Yale were all qualified. But Yale could not accept all 10. Your example is not convincing. BTW, you did not cite evidence that you are “definitely a decent human.” See the flaw in your argument? |
“Thus the number of students from a specific school will be limited not because they all attended the same school, but because they all had similar social, economic, and geographic profiles.” “Ivy League colleges, and institutions in their tier, are far more selective generally. While they do not maintain quotas for specific high schools, they generally only take a few students from each high school anyway, due to the level of competition for admissions generally.” https://www.ivyscholars.com/2022/09/27/do-colleges-compare-applicants-from-the-same-school/ |
I guess I should have specified using a reputable source. It's almost alarming ( with respect to your intelligence) that the quote you cite actually supports what I said earlier - that there are not quotas. I highlighted the relevant portion, in case you could not identify it. |
Correct. There are more than 5 STA kids who applied and I know the class--several who were rejected were equally qualified. Elite colleges clearly have a limit to how many kids they'll take from one high school. If kid A tosses away a top spot it hurts Kid B. Those of you saying it doesn't are being purposefully obtuse. |
Your analytical skills are really, really bad. It is definitely possible that 10 very qualified kids applied; it is probable that Yale had 10,000 extremely qualified kids apply. Obviously, not all are admitted. However, the argument that you made is that a kid from Sidwell was accepted REA and chose to instead attend Yale, thereby taking a slot from another Sidwell applicant. The hypothetical you provided above has absolutely zero relevancy to that argument. You seem completely unable to understand the fallacy of your position, and I'm doing trying to explain it to you. I sincerely hope your child has better analytical skills. |
No one said the colleges have a “quota.” It was “a limited number of students from each high school.” You need to understand what quota means. Insulting others intelligence does not make you more intelligent |