Anonymous wrote:I would imagine it varies widely by school. At our small top-rated magnet that gets kids into top schools it is hard to impossible in RD if someone is admitted ED/SCEA.
Anonymous wrote:How likely is a college to accept more students from the same high school during RD?
Lets say Larla and Karla got in ED to Selective U. Now Larlo, Marla, and Yarla apply RD to same Selective U.
What are Larlo, Marla and Yarla's chances of being accepted at that Selective U?
Or similar scenario to colleges with an acceptance rate anywhere from 5% to 45%?
Anonymous wrote:Students at the same HS effectively compete with each other for college admissions.
The main exceptions are when applying to large universities with very high admission rates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It also depends on the size of the college. Michigan? They can swing wildly each year on how many students they take from any one high school because they're filling 8000 spots.
Dartmouth? They usually won't as they're filling maybe 500 unhooked spots. It's hard for them to take more than a couple from any high school in America because there are 40K high schools.
But how many from the 40K high schools in America actually apply to Dartmouth?
Anonymous wrote:It also depends on the size of the college. Michigan? They can swing wildly each year on how many students they take from any one high school because they're filling 8000 spots.
Dartmouth? They usually won't as they're filling maybe 500 unhooked spots. It's hard for them to take more than a couple from any high school in America because there are 40K high schools.