Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
But not in the ED round.
You do not know that. It is yield protection.
Yield protection isn’t possible during ED. IT IS BINDING
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: UVA yield protects. My OOS DC was waitlisted at UVA last year. Got into several Ivies and Duke in RD.
Or maybe, though qualified, UVA just wasn’t interested enough in your kid. Plenty of qualified OOS applicants aren’t admitted precisely bc they’re OOS. It has nothing to do with yield protection.
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
Right, sure. That’s why my 3 white UMC kids who were in the top 5% of their large nova “DCUM approved” HS classes were admitted to uva in the past 5 years.
Key. Incredibly germane to this thread.
Things are different NOW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: UVA yield protects. My OOS DC was waitlisted at UVA last year. Got into several Ivies and Duke in RD.
Sorry, wasn’t clear. Did he apply ED or EA?
Applied EA. There is obviously no yield protection in ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
Right, sure. That’s why my 3 white UMC kids who were in the top 5% of their large nova “DCUM approved” HS classes were admitted to uva in the past 5 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
But not in the ED round.
You do not know that. It is yield protection.
Yield protection isn’t possible during ED. IT IS BINDING
Don’t bother trying to explain the simple logic. They just need to believe that they were “too good” and UVA just couldn’t believe they’d attend. After applying ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: UVA yield protects. My OOS DC was waitlisted at UVA last year. Got into several Ivies and Duke in RD.
Or maybe, though qualified, UVA just wasn’t interested enough in your kid. Plenty of qualified OOS applicants aren’t admitted precisely bc they’re OOS. It has nothing to do with yield protection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
But not in the ED round.
You do not know that. It is yield protection.
Yield protection isn’t possible during ED. IT IS BINDING
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
Anonymous wrote: UVA yield protects. My OOS DC was waitlisted at UVA last year. Got into several Ivies and Duke in RD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
But not in the ED round.
You do not know that. It is yield protection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“High stats” does not always equal rigorous course load across all five subjects.
People need to stop talking about “my high stats kid…..” because that never tells the whole story.
I do happen to know rigorous course load kids who did quite well, at the top of their "DCUM approved" high school - that were not accepted to UVA. Those same kids have outstanding ECs. It is not outrageous at all to think (know) that UVA practices yield protection. UVA disregards those from the top of their class, in the name of diversity. It is no secret.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early Decision Applications
Total number of Early Decision applications: 4,465 (4,243 last year)
Total number of VA apps: 2,573 (2,250)
Total number of OOS apps: 1,893 (1,993)
We use completed applications in our statistics.
Early Decision Offers
Overall offers: 1,133 (1,040)
Total VA offers: 782 (30% offer rate)
Total OOS offers: 351 (18.5% offer rate)
Enrollment Goal: ~3,900
Seriously? That’s a pretty high acceptance rate.
Sounds encouraging until you look at your kid’s FCPS high school and realize that 2 percent of class was admitted last year across all three cycles.