Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On CC there was a kid who was accepted to Notre Dame, Georgetown, and Boston College, but deferred to Villanova. I believe this is definitely an example of yield protection. His stats below:
Deferred - Business
ACT 35 (32M, 35R, 35E, 36S)
SAT 1530 (790M 740V)
SATII Math 800 History 760
Looks made up or a typo in the math act, it’s much easier than sat math
Anonymous wrote:What happens to high or relatively high stats kids who don’t qualify for need-based aid? I was one of those kids years ago and so were many of my classmates. There were a few in-state public schools that were known for generous merit aid (non-flagships, although our state flagship was pretty generous too). Does that just not exist anymore?
Anonymous wrote:On CC there was a kid who was accepted to Notre Dame, Georgetown, and Boston College, but deferred to Villanova. I believe this is definitely an example of yield protection. His stats below:
Deferred - Business
ACT 35 (32M, 35R, 35E, 36S)
SAT 1530 (790M 740V)
SATII Math 800 History 760
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please explain what this means. Tia!
Case western reserve EA:
SAT: 1570, GPA: 4.6 deferred
SAT: 1350, GPA: 4.1 accepted
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please explain what this means. Tia!
This refers to a college/university admissions office engaging in practices designed to give them the highest reportable yield (permitting the lowest possible acceptance rate), thereby pumping up th school’s competition stats.
It’s yield protection when a college refuses to admit super-highly-ranked applicants who are using that college as a safety. It’s yield protection when a college affords substantive admissions preferences to those indicating first/choice. Both are common practices. In a sense, all EarlyA/EarlyD programs are a form of yield protection, in part.
Also it is yield protection when a college gives preference to legacy applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please explain what this means. Tia!
This refers to a college/university admissions office engaging in practices designed to give them the highest reportable yield (permitting the lowest possible acceptance rate), thereby pumping up th school’s competition stats.
It’s yield protection when a college refuses to admit super-highly-ranked applicants who are using that college as a safety. It’s yield protection when a college affords substantive admissions preferences to those indicating first/choice. Both are common practices. In a sense, all EarlyA/EarlyD programs are a form of yield protection, in part.
Anonymous wrote:Please explain what this means. Tia!
Anonymous wrote:Please explain what this means. Tia!