Wherever your kid has legacy |
You can’t just apply to Wise campus then transfer to UVA as a matter of right. You have to apply to UVA and be offered to do a year at Wise with a guaranteed transfer if you maintain certain grades. In the former path, it’s the same as transferring to UVA from any other college. You are assessed along with the rest of the transfer applicant pool. |
WashU |
Emory and Wash U are both relatively easy for ED1, with acceptance rates over 30 percent, but rates drop significantly for ED2. |
They are literally within percentage points of one another for ED1. |
Nit for ED1, all Emory campuses over 30 percent. |
UVA has an oos ED rate of 18 percent, that’s comparable to Vandy, and a difficult admit. |
WashU is still higher, it also has a higher overall acceptance rate as well meaning its the easier school to get into regardless of whether it's ED or RD. Ther also have the same test avg now. |
Not anymore. We know so many Ivy and T10 alums where that did not work--even with very high stat kids. |
Ok Emory mom, in any case, both Emory and Wash U have acceptance rates over 30 percent for ED1, which is double or triple the early acceptance rate of other T25s, making them the easiest admits. |
Acceptance rate isn't the only thing that determines selectivity, also who said they were applying ED? Both have lower RD rates than Notre Dame and Georgetown. Also higher test scores. |
Apply ED1 to Wake on August 1 (if you can expand to T29 instead of T25.)
You should know your decision by late September, which gives plenty of time to ED1 somewhere else if denied -- Wash U, Emory, or humanities at Carnegie Mellon. |
Isn’t this interesting? I also find this to be the case. You must look at Naviance/scoir or inquire with school counselor. |
Wake Forest is ranked 46. Good try though. |
Exactly, if you look at more than just acceptance rate, but also GPA, Test scores, ECs. The answer is Umich or UVA, and Notre Dame for privates. Emory admissions always seemed more unpredictable than it's peers, and WashU wants the highest test scores possible. |