Anonymous wrote:People suspect Chicago because it is well known for its preference for a certain private schools. In any case, both Hopkins and Chicago offer ED2 and MIT doesn’t really have a higher acceptance rate for EA over RD, so unless the school is Duke, there is no reason not to apply early at the actual preferred Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone assuming this is UChicago and not Hopkins, UPenn, or Duke? All four are in USNWR's top 10 national universities (for 2022-23 anyway) and utilize ED.
Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone assuming this is UChicago and not Hopkins, UPenn, or Duke? All four are in USNWR's top 10 national universities (for 2022-23 anyway) and utilize ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Icarus died.
But if your son is #1 or #2 and a legacy, I'd let him apply to Harvard/Yale/Princeton. If he gets deferred and panics, he can apply ED2 to Chicago.
+1. This was our strategy in a similar situation.
Anonymous wrote:Icarus died.
But if your son is #1 or #2 and a legacy, I'd let him apply to Harvard/Yale/Princeton. If he gets deferred and panics, he can apply ED2 to Chicago.
Anonymous wrote:Have you checked whether the pipeline is only for kids who ED?
I actually disagree that a school has to be your top choice to ED to it. It could be your 2nd choice, but if your changes of ED are to #2 are good while any acceptance to #1 is remote, might make sense to ED to #2. Lest you end up with #3. That could be a rational choice.
Anonymous wrote:I’d encourage my kid to apply to their dream school, and apply RD to the pipeline school since lresumably there is still some advantage there if HYPS does not work out.
Anonymous wrote:I would dig deep into that "pipeline" and figure out why so many students from that high school are accepted. Are a disproportionate number of them legacies? Is it a nearby college that many parents work for?
8 students in my high school class were accepted to Princeton (out of 88 students.) If you scrutinized the acceptances, you would learn that at least 3 had family members who worked for the university, at least 2 others were legacies, and one was a recruited athlete. So, that pipeline to Princeton was not the sure thing that some people might have thought.