Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that ED is worth a shot, if merit aid isn't a deciding factor.
However, it is far from a sure thing. If you pull recruited athletes and legacies out of the ED numbers, acceptance rates are better than RD, but not nearly as good as the raw numbers look.
One interesting example was that Vanderbilt accidentally published their ED1 numbers separately from ED2 (they usually combine them), and, if you did the math with the final numbers, you could see that the ED2 acceptance rate wasn't much, if any, better than RD.
Recruited athletes aren’t considered ED. They are in their own category.
Recruitment itself is a separate process, but at every school I’m aware of, recruited athletes apply ED.
https://www.collegezoom.com/early/early-decision-early-action/
Which matters A LOT at SLACS where varsity athletes make up 25-30% of the student body. But at mid sized schools like Vanderbilt and BC (just to name 2 that are mentioned above), varsity athletes make up, what, 6-7% of students. Even if the entire population of athletes are admitted early, it wouldn’t account for their disparate in ED vs RD acceptance rates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ED1 - Dream school with a reasonable chance.
ED2 - Target.
EA - everything else.
That is about the safest way to do it to maximize satisfaction.
Which doesn't work for the vast majority of schools my Dc applied to because they only had ED and RD.
Lots of schools only offer ED/RD, not just the ones your DC is applying to. Both of my DCs did ED1. One had selected an ED2, if necessary. The other was thinking they would roll to RD. Both of them picked a range of schools, intentionally including some that offered EA. While both got in early decision, I think I would've suggested that both pick a rolling decision school if I had been more on it.
The other wrinkle is tht DC's first choice has only RD, so ED to anywhere else meant giving up the dream school if ED worked out.
So I would suggest that DC try to find one or two schools that offer EA, so DC goes into RD with the possibility of having one or two admissions. If your DC attends a school where the majority of students are already in somewhere through ED/EA, it can be fairly overwhelming going into RD with nothing. Happened to one of my DC's BFFs, who ended up WLed at reaches and yield protected rejected @ Emory, Tufts, Wash U, etc. Fortunately one came through, but it was nerve-wracking.
Yeild protected??! Lol some of you are so entitled. You're children just aren't that impressive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ED1 - Dream school with a reasonable chance.
ED2 - Target.
EA - everything else.
That is about the safest way to do it to maximize satisfaction.
Which doesn't work for the vast majority of schools my Dc applied to because they only had ED and RD.
Lots of schools only offer ED/RD, not just the ones your DC is applying to. Both of my DCs did ED1. One had selected an ED2, if necessary. The other was thinking they would roll to RD. Both of them picked a range of schools, intentionally including some that offered EA. While both got in early decision, I think I would've suggested that both pick a rolling decision school if I had been more on it.
The other wrinkle is tht DC's first choice has only RD, so ED to anywhere else meant giving up the dream school if ED worked out.
So I would suggest that DC try to find one or two schools that offer EA, so DC goes into RD with the possibility of having one or two admissions. If your DC attends a school where the majority of students are already in somewhere through ED/EA, it can be fairly overwhelming going into RD with nothing. Happened to one of my DC's BFFs, who ended up WLed at reaches and yield protected rejected @ Emory, Tufts, Wash U, etc. Fortunately one came through, but it was nerve-wracking.
Yeild protected??! Lol some of you are so entitled. You're children just aren't that impressive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are able financially to ED, please don’t be like us and think “naaaah I’m just gonna see where all DC gets in and make a decision then.” Pick a reasonable target (maybe a low reach) where your kid would be happy and ED there. Because what’s left over in April when you’ll have all your options is … the next tier down.
People told us don’t do it, don’t pass on the chance to ED. We thought naaaahhh that doesn’t apply to DS. He has high stats and doesn’t have a clear favorite. DS does have choices, but not ones as good as he could have had if he had picked in November and EDd. There just aren’t many spots left for RD after the top colleges have filled up with ED.
Thanks for your post. To sum it up, you have to be financially loaded and unconcerned about aid and your kid will have the best shot in college application selection.
We're not loaded. If the numbers don't work, they'll go elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is an unhooked, no sport, no legacy, white male who applied ED and got in. I know ED and full pay helped him.
How do you know that?
His stats were below the midlines in the CDS.
I’m guessing he wasn’t applying for engineering or CS. Males applying to humanities or schools of arts and sciences, etc, have an enormous advantage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is an unhooked, no sport, no legacy, white male who applied ED and got in. I know ED and full pay helped him.
How do you know that?
His stats were below the midlines in the CDS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are able financially to ED, please don’t be like us and think “naaaah I’m just gonna see where all DC gets in and make a decision then.” Pick a reasonable target (maybe a low reach) where your kid would be happy and ED there. Because what’s left over in April when you’ll have all your options is … the next tier down.
People told us don’t do it, don’t pass on the chance to ED. We thought naaaahhh that doesn’t apply to DS. He has high stats and doesn’t have a clear favorite. DS does have choices, but not ones as good as he could have had if he had picked in November and EDd. There just aren’t many spots left for RD after the top colleges have filled up with ED.
Quite obvious you still don't have a grasp on the admissions process. Schools ranked a little lower aren't always easier to get into. For instance Notre Dame a top 20 has a 13% acceptance rate while Tufts a top 30 has a 9 % acceptance rate. [/q]
Glass houses, PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are able financially to ED, please don’t be like us and think “naaaah I’m just gonna see where all DC gets in and make a decision then.” Pick a reasonable target (maybe a low reach) where your kid would be happy and ED there. Because what’s left over in April when you’ll have all your options is … the next tier down.
People told us don’t do it, don’t pass on the chance to ED. We thought naaaahhh that doesn’t apply to DS. He has high stats and doesn’t have a clear favorite. DS does have choices, but not ones as good as he could have had if he had picked in November and EDd. There just aren’t many spots left for RD after the top colleges have filled up with ED.
Quite obvious you still don't have a grasp on the admissions process. Schools ranked a little lower aren't always easier to get into. For instance Notre Dame a top 20 has a 13% acceptance rate while Tufts a top 30 has a 9 % acceptance rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ED1 - Dream school with a reasonable chance.
ED2 - Target.
EA - everything else.
That is about the safest way to do it to maximize satisfaction.
Most schools do not have ED2 and the ones that do aren't Targets. Do Uchicago, Emory , Vanderbilt, WashU, CMU sound like targets? Maybe BC and Northeastern but DCUM would not be satisfied with those schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ED1 - Dream school with a reasonable chance.
ED2 - Target.
EA - everything else.
That is about the safest way to do it to maximize satisfaction.
Which doesn't work for the vast majority of schools my Dc applied to because they only had ED and RD.
Lots of schools only offer ED/RD, not just the ones your DC is applying to. Both of my DCs did ED1. One had selected an ED2, if necessary. The other was thinking they would roll to RD. Both of them picked a range of schools, intentionally including some that offered EA. While both got in early decision, I think I would've suggested that both pick a rolling decision school if I had been more on it.
The other wrinkle is tht DC's first choice has only RD, so ED to anywhere else meant giving up the dream school if ED worked out.
So I would suggest that DC try to find one or two schools that offer EA, so DC goes into RD with the possibility of having one or two admissions. If your DC attends a school where the majority of students are already in somewhere through ED/EA, it can be fairly overwhelming going into RD with nothing. Happened to one of my DC's BFFs, who ended up WLed at reaches and yield protected rejected @ Emory, Tufts, Wash U, etc. Fortunately one came through, but it was nerve-wracking.
Anonymous wrote:ED1 - Dream school with a reasonable chance.
ED2 - Target.
EA - everything else.
That is about the safest way to do it to maximize satisfaction.
Anonymous wrote:If you are able financially to ED, please don’t be like us and think “naaaah I’m just gonna see where all DC gets in and make a decision then.” Pick a reasonable target (maybe a low reach) where your kid would be happy and ED there. Because what’s left over in April when you’ll have all your options is … the next tier down.
People told us don’t do it, don’t pass on the chance to ED. We thought naaaahhh that doesn’t apply to DS. He has high stats and doesn’t have a clear favorite. DS does have choices, but not ones as good as he could have had if he had picked in November and EDd. There just aren’t many spots left for RD after the top colleges have filled up with ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A couple of posts say that ED1 gives more of a bump than ED2. For some reason this feels instinctually right to me. However, school counselors and even the schools themselves say there is no difference between ED1 and ED2. Anyone have facts to support that ED1 is better than ED2?
It’s just one school, but here’s a detailed article about Wesleyan’s ED cycles this year: http://wesleyanargus.com/2022/02/24/university-admits-473-students-into-class-of-2026-before-regular-decision/
ED1 acceptance rate was 44%; ED2 was 31%.
It is obvious. The strongest kids apply for HYPSM first so they are not in ED1. After they get deferred from HYPSM and other top10 they join ED2 crowd. So the competition becomes a lot more intense