| Troll |
Then the “back-up plan” is a school your child can get into through EA or RD. If your child only has a shot of going to said school through the ED route but is not willing to withdraw all other applications upon acceptance, then the answer is this is NOT the school for your DC because your child actually does not prefer the ED option to all other options. I get that service academies are a longshot, but so is getting into HYPS, etc. And keeping one’s hat in the ring after an ED acceptance on the off chance that HYPS or a service academy comes calling is completely UNethical. A violation of the agreement. Poor integrity. TBH, if your DC does get admitted into a service academy, I would hope your DC shows stronger character and sense of right than you have displayed here, OP. |
Wow. |
| My niece got a Letter of Assurance from her service academy in October. That should be your goal, certainly not an ED! |
Doubtful your DC will even get a nomination let alone an appointment, so no worries about your hypothetical query. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. |
| By all means, ask the college counselor when school starts. I only regret we can’t overhear the conversation when you do. |
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Mine went through the West Point application process. He obtained the Congressional Nomination as part of the process. He also separately applied for the 4 year ROTC scholarship, which he received. But since West Point doesn't take ED applications, he went ahead and applied ED to one of the highly selective schools that have on-campus ROTC cadres - Princeton, MIT, Vanderbilt, Duke, and Notre Dame all have significant ROTC programs. He was accepted ED to one of those schools. Whereupon he immediately reached out to West Point and withdrew his application.
There was never any question about how to game the system. The rules are very clear. For OP, I suspect that if West Point found out that this applicant violated an ED contract, they'd likely rescind the acceptance. Applying to WP and applying ED to a highly selective university is a very common thing. But the regulations are very clear about what to do with a binding ED acceptance. West Point isn't happening. As always, choose carefully where you apply ED. If it's not the first choice, don't. |
| Cornell and Michigan also have ROTC. |