Is it OK to apply to one school ED and another school EA? Or is that wrong vis a vis the ED school? |
You can only have one ED pending at a time, At the same time you can apply to other schools EA. If you get accepted to your ED school, you have to withdraw all other apps. For more info, see the Common App ED agreement. |
Thanks! |
I know that this varies from kid to kid, but as a general matter, what are the well thought off "safeties" or "likelies". |
No such thing. One kids stretch is another kids safety. Safeties can be anywhere from Williams to U of MD to Montgomery College. |
Williams is nobody's safety. |
Agree. |
Maybe, but not as many as my son has at his highly touted Western MCPS high school. That counselor has 500 - 600 students that she alone has to guide through the process. As you can imagine, we are not leaving it in her hands. We not even talk to her about it. She is just too too busy. She won't talk to parents unless their kid is a junior. No talking at all! |
I know a kid there now whose top choices were Stanford and Princeton. May have had one school lower than Williams but it was his backup. Obviously not too many kids in that position, including my own kids. Hence my point that the range of likelies and safeties is totally kid dependent. |
If his only three schools were Stanford, Princeton, and Williams as a safety, he was poorly advised and very lucky. |
know a kid there now whose top choices were Stanford and Princeton. May have had one school lower than Williams but it was his backup. Obviously not too many kids in that position, including my own kids. Hence my point that the range of likelies and safeties is totally kid dependent.
If his only three schools were Stanford, Princeton, and Williams as a safety, he was poorly advised and very lucky. Agree (new poster here -- former admissions staffer with 3 kids of my own in college or now graduated) |
This is correct as far as it goes, however, it's important to note that schools with an EA option vary in whether they permit applicants to apply early to other schools. All EA options are non-binding, but some are exclusive, prohibiting applicants from applying early elsewhere or, in some cases, prohibiting them from applying early to other private colleges, but allowing them to apply EA to public colleges. |
I would turn your whole strategy around. Start by thinking about what your daughter is like and what kind of environment would work for her. Large school? Small school? Urban? Rural? Far from home? Close to home? Are there particular activities/sports/etc. that would be important for her? Once you've factored all those things in and figured a list of possible schools, then look at the admissions profile for those schools and see if she is likely to get in, with her academic background. |
You don't sound as clueless as you made it out to be. Private high school, detailed SAT scores, etc. My parents were in fact clueless. They couldn't even tell you the name of my high school, LOL. |