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College and University Discussion
Reply to "The ebb and flow of admissions hostility"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I am a parent of a college sophomore and a high school senior, so I've been on this site a lot over the past few years. I've recognized a sort of cadence to the threads: August-November - optimism. Families asking for school suggestions for their "high stats" student. Everyone underestimates the importance of safety schools. Everyone is high on life and possibilities. November 15 - December 15 venom or bragging Depending on how your ED decision lands, you are either estatic and bragging about being a "good parent" or you are lashing out about "hooks." (See the recent thread about legacy preference for reference) The world is "unfair" for the first time in your precious snowflake's life... December - everyone is refreshing the IG decision page every 10 minutes, you are looking up schools you've never heard of before and rabbit holing into some random kid from California. Your "high stats" kids scramble to look for safety schools that don't hurt their pride too much. Panic at the disco January- April The honeymoon phase for ED admits. They are happily goofing off in class and gloating. Dork rumspringa April - The honeymoon ends for ED admits as all of their peers receive news from colleges. Most feel some buyers remorse "X got into XYZ?! Why did I ED?! I could have gotten in too!" Everyone is so exhausted and desensitized by this point that the yeses and nos just collect in a bucket to be analyzed and thought about at the last possible moment. You probably don't even check the IG "decisions" pages anymore. It's just exhausting. May No one cares anymore. because it all, mostly, worked out for most kids. Sure, there is a striver or two who got screwed because they didn't have any real safeties, but they usually get off a waitlist at Michigan or somewhere equivalent by August. Travel safely my fellow parents. You will survive this. [/quote] Thank you for posting this. I have two kids who are seniors - one was rejected early and the other was deferred early, so we are going nowhere during winter break so they can write a bunch of supplemental essays while our friends whose kids got into their ED schools are laying out at a beach in Mexico or Hawaii (and posting Facebook pics). Happy for them, feeling a pity-party for us. I doubt the ED kids (most of whom got into schools where they are double legacy - no bitterness, but that's just the truth) will be regretting anything in the spring but this is my first rodeo.[/quote] You doubt based on what? You know nothing. Listen to the experienced parent here. They are spot on. [/quote] You think someone who got into Dartmouth ED or Northwestern ED or Duke ED is going to have buyer's remorse in the spring?[/quote] Sadly, yes. They do. Even kids who get I to 1,2 and 4 beat themselves up about 3. The Rat race is real. [/quote] Well, that's on them. Probably shouldn't have applied ED in the first place if they are having "buyer's remorse" getting accepted to T25 schools.[/quote] In my experience its more of an issue for the kids who EDII, i.e. they try REA at a real first choice, get denied or deferred and then EDII to UChicago, Tufts, Rice etc. only to see their similar peers have great choices in RD. By definition EDII is not about real first choice [/quote] I really have not seen this. RD has been pretty tough past four cycles. There are always exceptions but more kids disappointed than not. Of course, should never ED to a school where one wouldn't be happy to go.[/quote My experience is with high stats unhooked private school kids, many did very well in RD (UPenn, Columbia, Stanford, Rice, Vanderbilt, Brown, UVA, Cal, UMich, Williams, Amherst) so those that had applied early been deferred and then in a "Panic at the Disco" moment EDII to Tufts etc definitely experienced regrets[/quote]
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