Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was us. We attended the accepted student events at the other schools, and DC let the WL school know it was first choice.
Then we told DC to assume the WL was a no, make a choice between the other four options (one of which was the neighborhood public - we always included that in the mix), and if anything changed, we'd revisit the decision. DC requested another shadow day at one of the schools, and that sealed the deal. We sent decline notices to the other accepted schools, paid the deposit on time, and waited to hear from the WL school until the last day when the contract was due. We didn't hear and so sent in the contract (on the final day). DC is very happy, and is clearly in the right place.
Never got off the WL, btw, though we heard that someone else did.
Congratulations on having choices.
OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
Think you should express your continued interest. But it might not make any difference in terms of a spot for your child. It’s not a one to one thing – depending on students that don’t accept, they’ll be looking to round out the class with kids with specific attributes.
I agree with this poster. We were w/l at one of our top choices but the admissions officer was clear on letting us know that even if one of the admits decline the offer of acceptance, that our chances were not that great due to our request for fa. In other words, enough fa had to be freed up from declines to even make our DC's admission possible from the w/l. And there are other factors after that which they had to navigate. We quietly waited on the w/l while making another top choice (that we actually ended up at and absolutely love for our DC. DC loves it too). Our niece just went through this also. Was wait listed at a college. But they had a nice savings fund to take care of the first two years and demonstrated little need. Niece moved off the w/l shortly thereafter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was us. We attended the accepted student events at the other schools, and DC let the WL school know it was first choice.
Then we told DC to assume the WL was a no, make a choice between the other four options (one of which was the neighborhood public - we always included that in the mix), and if anything changed, we'd revisit the decision. DC requested another shadow day at one of the schools, and that sealed the deal. We sent decline notices to the other accepted schools, paid the deposit on time, and waited to hear from the WL school until the last day when the contract was due. We didn't hear and so sent in the contract (on the final day). DC is very happy, and is clearly in the right place.
Never got off the WL, btw, though we heard that someone else did.
Congratulations on having choices.
OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
Think you should express your continued interest. But it might not make any difference in terms of a spot for your child. It’s not a one to one thing – depending on students that don’t accept, they’ll be looking to round out the class with kids with specific attributes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was us. We attended the accepted student events at the other schools, and DC let the WL school know it was first choice.
Then we told DC to assume the WL was a no, make a choice between the other four options (one of which was the neighborhood public - we always included that in the mix), and if anything changed, we'd revisit the decision. DC requested another shadow day at one of the schools, and that sealed the deal. We sent decline notices to the other accepted schools, paid the deposit on time, and waited to hear from the WL school until the last day when the contract was due. We didn't hear and so sent in the contract (on the final day). DC is very happy, and is clearly in the right place.
Never got off the WL, btw, though we heard that someone else did.
Congratulations on having choices.
OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
Anonymous wrote:This was us. We attended the accepted student events at the other schools, and DC let the WL school know it was first choice.
Then we told DC to assume the WL was a no, make a choice between the other four options (one of which was the neighborhood public - we always included that in the mix), and if anything changed, we'd revisit the decision. DC requested another shadow day at one of the schools, and that sealed the deal. We sent decline notices to the other accepted schools, paid the deposit on time, and waited to hear from the WL school until the last day when the contract was due. We didn't hear and so sent in the contract (on the final day). DC is very happy, and is clearly in the right place.
Never got off the WL, btw, though we heard that someone else did.
Congratulations on having choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sanest path is to learn to love the school that admitted you. But you can stay on the other school’s waitlist and see what happens.
There is something to this advice. Having gone through this process, I really believe the schools are typically on target with which students will be right for their mix. It's not personal, but there is a certain fit per school. So I think that you have to trust the schools a bit that they are making solid choices out of many applicants, about who would be the best fit based on their offering because it's a two way street. They want the student to succeed as well.
That being said, if a school chooses your student and it was one of your top choices, then be flattered. I would take the bird in the hand and begin looking closely at what's great about that school and why they think I am so great a fit for them.
Anonymous wrote:The sanest path is to learn to love the school that admitted you. But you can stay on the other school’s waitlist and see what happens.
Anonymous wrote:first time applicant here and need your advice. Thank you!