Certainly plausible. They can look at their yield from this ED-deferred wave and tweak for next year. |
+1 That’s a really good point. If they have a substantially higher ED acceptance rate vs. EA acceptance rate, it looks bad from an equity perspective. Normally it doesn’t matter too much, but they’re a public school and state lawmakers already don’t like the OOS percentage. |
PP. The date may be a clue. This is basically the earliest possible date that would make sense for non-bound EA acceptance, since Friday would have been weird, being over a big holiday weekend. Today's acceptances will certainly stop some of the admitted students from submitting any further apps and I would expect yield of the ED-deferred admits to be very high, perhaps higher now than if UM waited until the end of the month. |
Ross |
| Most kids I know want to be done. I agree that the yield will be high among the formerly bound ED kids |
| It sucks that they accepted deferred ED kids that likely spent their entire break doing RD apps and their ECI. Oh well, maybe Michigan will lose some of those kids when other acceptances start coming in. |
| No news for my EA kid who applied engineering. |
Agreed. And in addition to external Michigan state politics, there may be internal university politics at play. There may be different factions within the administration and even within the admissions office regarding whether they should offer ED at all. That could also explain why the policy was announced with so little notice. |
same |
Same here |
No news for my EA kid who applied biology. |
|
DMV public HS, ED deferral just accepted at LSA for poli sci. 3.9/1500/12 APs.
A little more stress than an initial acceptance, but in the end it's nice to be able to consider multiple options. |
Kensington, MD resident. DS accepted today. 3.9 unweighted, 1530 SAT, major of statistics. Good APs, extracurriculars, but no hook. |
Another same. |
Yep. The deferral (different school) cost $1,100 to complete 12 other RD applications and a wasted Xmas break. |