NP. This will depend on the college. For UPenn and NU, the longstanding belief is that a legacy should apply ED to take advantage of a legacy benefit. There isn't going to be great sources of info, unfortunately. |
Did you keep that original P decision outstanding, just to see if kid would have gotten in? Or did kid withdraw the app? |
Deferred then rejected Yale SCEA. At Princeton. Got into Columbia, Penn, Northwestern. |
Niece REA to Yale - deferred - accepted!
Nephew ED to Brown - deferred |
PP here - nephew finally got into Brown after being deferred in ED! |
Wow. This is incredible! |
Congratulations! UMD has a fantastic engineering program. |
Daughter ED to Cornell >
Deferred> Waitlisted on Ivy Day> Offered a Transfer Option> Spent freshman year at a cheap public > Accepted and now attending Cornell Loves it. |
EA : MIT (deferred)
ED2 : UChicago (accepted) |
What would be the point of not withdrawing? To kick yourself for applying ED2 if you get in? Follow the rules and withdraw like you're supposed to. |
Paris from Gilmore Girls vibes |
Harvard: an undergraduate population filled with insufferable kids. |
Withdrew. The odds of getting into Princeton were so small, and Chicago was a strong runner-up. Kid is super, super happy. |
i went to harvard 25 years ago and there were lots of kids like this even then. I can only imagine its gotten way more extreme as the difficulty of getting has increases. Harvard has a lot of students who are average smart, but main salient quality is ambition and being “driven.” |
They are the type who will not let anyone get in their way. Hard pass. |