Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
All colleges and universities do it. It's called a "soft deferral". My kid got them from all of the Ivies he applied to. Just a random pull off the internet, here is UCLA last year: The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) offered 15,242 waitlist spaces for the class of 2026, but it only admitted 214 students. This put the UCLA waitlist acceptance rate at a historic low of 2%.Feb 11, 2023
7,000 were deferred from EA/ED to regular decision not waitlist.
Dunno. That's a precise copy and paste from the internet. Don't have a pony in the race. Just pointing out that all schools have monster deferral/waitlists and take few.
More on "soft rejections".
Is waitlist a soft rejection?
If a student is waitlisted, it usually means that a school feels the student is a good fit, but the school is constrained by class sizes. Keep in mind, however, that some schools use waitlist offers as “soft rejections.” The waitlist offer is more of a “courtesy” and they have no intention of admitting you.
As has been explained, a deferral is not the same as a waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
All colleges and universities do it. It's called a "soft deferral". My kid got them from all of the Ivies he applied to. Just a random pull off the internet, here is UCLA last year: The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) offered 15,242 waitlist spaces for the class of 2026, but it only admitted 214 students. This put the UCLA waitlist acceptance rate at a historic low of 2%.Feb 11, 2023
You are confusing "Waitlist" and "Deferral of EA/ED to RD". There's no way your child can have multiple "EA/ED deferrals to RD" from Ivies because each student is only allowed to apply EA/ED to one Ivy. However, they CAN receive multiple RD Waitlists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
All colleges and universities do it. It's called a "soft deferral". My kid got them from all of the Ivies he applied to. Just a random pull off the internet, here is UCLA last year: The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) offered 15,242 waitlist spaces for the class of 2026, but it only admitted 214 students. This put the UCLA waitlist acceptance rate at a historic low of 2%.Feb 11, 2023
7,000 were deferred from EA/ED to regular decision not waitlist.
Dunno. That's a precise copy and paste from the internet. Don't have a pony in the race. Just pointing out that all schools have monster deferral/waitlists and take few.
More on "soft rejections".
Is waitlist a soft rejection?
If a student is waitlisted, it usually means that a school feels the student is a good fit, but the school is constrained by class sizes. Keep in mind, however, that some schools use waitlist offers as “soft rejections.” The waitlist offer is more of a “courtesy” and they have no intention of admitting you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
All colleges and universities do it. It's called a "soft deferral". My kid got them from all of the Ivies he applied to. Just a random pull off the internet, here is UCLA last year: The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) offered 15,242 waitlist spaces for the class of 2026, but it only admitted 214 students. This put the UCLA waitlist acceptance rate at a historic low of 2%.Feb 11, 2023
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
All colleges and universities do it. It's called a "soft deferral". My kid got them from all of the Ivies he applied to. Just a random pull off the internet, here is UCLA last year: The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) offered 15,242 waitlist spaces for the class of 2026, but it only admitted 214 students. This put the UCLA waitlist acceptance rate at a historic low of 2%.Feb 11, 2023
7,000 were deferred from EA/ED to regular decision not waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
All colleges and universities do it. It's called a "soft deferral". My kid got them from all of the Ivies he applied to. Just a random pull off the internet, here is UCLA last year: The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) offered 15,242 waitlist spaces for the class of 2026, but it only admitted 214 students. This put the UCLA waitlist acceptance rate at a historic low of 2%.Feb 11, 2023
7,000 were deferred from EA/ED to regular decision not waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
All colleges and universities do it. It's called a "soft deferral". My kid got them from all of the Ivies he applied to. Just a random pull off the internet, here is UCLA last year: The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) offered 15,242 waitlist spaces for the class of 2026, but it only admitted 214 students. This put the UCLA waitlist acceptance rate at a historic low of 2%.Feb 11, 2023
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2022 numbers.
Total Regular Decision Offers of Admission
Overall RD offers: 2,123 (2,628 last year)
Total VA RD offers: 650 (17% offer rate)
Total OOS RD offers: 1,473 (12% offer rate)
Wait, they are offering more than 2x the number of oos students as in-state? Is that right?
Yes, but the yield for OOS is historically much worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am fairly confident that this will be an extremely low admittance. Most people know to apply ED or EA to UVA. I would make back up plans for sure. They've been known to not accept top 5% candidates. Good luck!
Some people who apply early are deferred to RD so even if they knew to apply ED or EA they are now waiting on RD decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The acceptance rate for deferred students is even lower - like 2% last year.
This seems like a weakness on the decision-makers’ side. Or, why would it be so low when it was UVA who said, hang in there, you still have a shot?
I asked that question on the last IG call. Why defer 7,000 from EA only to accept ~100? Even if half don't accept EA, that's still a ridiculously low percentage. Didn't really understand the response.