Anonymous wrote:My unhooked kid got into Georgetown EA. Decent stats, but nothing earth shattering. Big focus on service and faith. We were shocked. She ultimately turned it down for a lower ranked school, but that's another story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The advantage is almost double. The acceptance rate for each application round is about the same, but EA apps have about a 10% chance in RD, which brings the overall acceptance rate across both EA and RD rounds to almost double for EA applicants.
Just a little reminder from Math side: for the same person, accepted in EA and accepted in RD are not two independent events. So, you can't add the % together.
Right, but look at this another way. If you add the # accepted EA and the # of EA accepted during RD, the % of EA applicants accepted across both rounds is much larger than the % of RD applicants accepted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The advantage is almost double. The acceptance rate for each application round is about the same, but EA apps have about a 10% chance in RD, which brings the overall acceptance rate across both EA and RD rounds to almost double for EA applicants.
Just a little reminder from Math side: for the same person, accepted in EA and accepted in RD are not two independent events. So, you can't add the % together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. And if your DC is a legacy, they won't even give the bump in EA, only in RD.
What's the reason to do so?
Anonymous wrote:No. And if your DC is a legacy, they won't even give the bump in EA, only in RD.
Anonymous wrote:The advantage is almost double. The acceptance rate for each application round is about the same, but EA apps have about a 10% chance in RD, which brings the overall acceptance rate across both EA and RD rounds to almost double for EA applicants.