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Reply to "My DS is regretting applying ED to a very small LAC ..."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My DS was rejected from a small SLAC in ED despite having a very strong application and high stats. DS now thinks it was a waste to put his ED option into a smaller school. Learn from him and use ED for mid-size or larger unis with thousands of seats for your ED and ED2 rounds. Don't do what we did and use it on a small SLAC that only has a few hundred seats to offer. The odds are against you.[/quote] Look at the percent that get in, not the number of seats available. THEN you will understand the odds.[/quote] No. ED admit rate does not give you your true odds. Two schools. Both schools have ED admit rates of 15%. School A has 1,000 ED applicants. School B has 2,000 ED applicants. That means that School A has 150 ED seats and School B has 300 ED seats. Both schools also have 105 recruited athletes who have passed a pre-read and have a 100% chance of admission. After taking out the athletes, - School A has 895 other students competing for 45 seats (5% admit rate) - School B has 1,895 other students competing for 195 seats (10% admit rate) The overall admit rate at both schools is the same, but the odds of a non-athlete being admitted are twice as high at school B.[/quote] Convoluted and flawed math. Why assume both schools have 105 recruited athletes when School B is twice as large as A?[/quote] Teams are pretty much the same size at every school. Did you think that NESCACs play 5-on-5 soccer and 3-on-3 volleyball? That’s not how this works. All else equal, at a smaller school athletes make up a larger percentage of the student body. [/quote] Right. There is some variation based on what sports they offer (e.g., football is a huge team; if the school doesn’t have football, the number of athletes will be much lower) and how many sports they offer, but still we’re talking about a range of 500-1000 athletes across all schools, including the biggest D1 schools. For example, Michigan has 900 athletes, and Williams has 750. You can look up schools individually here: https://ope.ed.gov/athletics/#/institution/search[/quote]
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