Anonymous wrote:I am still upset I was rejected from Stanford. This was 1987.
Anonymous wrote:We managed expectations way ahead of time. We also had the benefit of watching other families at her small private go through the process. Every year there are one or two families that enter the application season with the attitude that their kid’s grades and scores match the grades and scores for xyz very selective institutions so those are their target schools. Those kids typically had tough admissions seasons. If a school has a single digit percentage of acceptances, it is not a target. Our daughter loved an in state school that is tough to get into. She decided to apply ED to her first choice and she applied EA to two other instate schools and she applied to a rolling admission safety.
If she wasn’t accepted to her ED, she had one reach and one out of state target to apply to.
Anonymous wrote:OP, depends on the kid of course, and how quickly they tend to recover. But for most if they have another good option much of it will subside once they put down the deposit and commit, and the remainder will evaporate once they hit campus on the first day. My first got into his safety from the waitlist (yep, we screwed up that whole thing) but settled in quickly and had a great four years. I doubt he devotes any thought at all to what might have been elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:I still haven't gotten over being rejected by CU Boulder.
They rejected me and I got into Harvard. I never thought I had a chance at Harvard when I applied, and only really wanted to live in Boulder. I would have gone to CU if they had taken me.