Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
I remember the days when I thought it mattered or we could have an effect on the outcome. It doesn’t and you can’t. Use good judgement, send a note if it’s important to you, but most important move on and model resilience for your child…
So depressing. They had responded to an email early on and indicated something about in touch over next weeks (we’ll before decision time). Maybe I should have indicated then it was our first choice.
Nothing you do now matters at all. Even “1st choice” etc.
Yea that’s what I figured. Friends trying to make me feel better - at least DC wasn’t rejected. But it’s functionally the same thing. Don’t know what I did wrong or could have done better other than responding to that email early on and indicating then it was our first choice.
Why is this waitlist thread so negative while the other waitlist thread is so positive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
I remember the days when I thought it mattered or we could have an effect on the outcome. It doesn’t and you can’t. Use good judgement, send a note if it’s important to you, but most important move on and model resilience for your child…
So depressing. They had responded to an email early on and indicated something about in touch over next weeks (we’ll before decision time). Maybe I should have indicated then it was our first choice.
Nothing you do now matters at all. Even “1st choice” etc.
Yea that’s what I figured. Friends trying to make me feel better - at least DC wasn’t rejected. But it’s functionally the same thing. Don’t know what I did wrong or could have done better other than responding to that email early on and indicating then it was our first choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
I remember the days when I thought it mattered or we could have an effect on the outcome. It doesn’t and you can’t. Use good judgement, send a note if it’s important to you, but most important move on and model resilience for your child…
So depressing. They had responded to an email early on and indicated something about in touch over next weeks (we’ll before decision time). Maybe I should have indicated then it was our first choice.
Nothing you do now matters at all. Even “1st choice” etc.
Yea that’s what I figured. Friends trying to make me feel better - at least DC wasn’t rejected. But it’s functionally the same thing. Don’t know what I did wrong or could have done better other than responding to that email early on and indicating then it was our first choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
I remember the days when I thought it mattered or we could have an effect on the outcome. It doesn’t and you can’t. Use good judgement, send a note if it’s important to you, but most important move on and model resilience for your child…
So depressing. They had responded to an email early on and indicated something about in touch over next weeks (we’ll before decision time). Maybe I should have indicated then it was our first choice.
Nothing you do now matters at all. Even “1st choice” etc.
Yea that’s what I figured. Friends trying to make me feel better - at least DC wasn’t rejected. But it’s functionally the same thing. Don’t know what I did wrong or could have done better other than responding to that email early on and indicating then it was our first choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
I remember the days when I thought it mattered or we could have an effect on the outcome. It doesn’t and you can’t. Use good judgement, send a note if it’s important to you, but most important move on and model resilience for your child…
So depressing. They had responded to an email early on and indicated something about in touch over next weeks (we’ll before decision time). Maybe I should have indicated then it was our first choice.
Nothing you do now matters at all. Even “1st choice” etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
I remember the days when I thought it mattered or we could have an effect on the outcome. It doesn’t and you can’t. Use good judgement, send a note if it’s important to you, but most important move on and model resilience for your child…
So depressing. They had responded to an email early on and indicated something about in touch over next weeks (we’ll before decision time). Maybe I should have indicated then it was our first choice.
Anonymous wrote:is this pre-K?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
I remember the days when I thought it mattered or we could have an effect on the outcome. It doesn’t and you can’t. Use good judgement, send a note if it’s important to you, but most important move on and model resilience for your child…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.
Is it ok that we didn’t send that note today? Should we wait until Monday? Or send that note tomorrow (Saturday)?
Anonymous wrote:Read the 10,000 previous threads on this. Please. Conventional wisdom:
1. Send a note indicating that it’s your first choice and that you’ll go if accepted.
2. It’s not a waiting list with “higher and lower” people ranked. It’s a pool. “Hey, we’re two girls and ideally URM short, let’s see what we’ve got.”
3. Assume that plan B is the path, whatever that is. A tiny percentage of people ever get off of waitlists - some schools more than others. It’s a nice way of saying that that for a school with 100 kids in 9th grade, of which, say, 30 are new, there were probably around 375 applications of which 37 were accepted and 100 waitlisted. It’s a long, long shot.