Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reality for unhooked kids is that applying ED, SCEA, EA, and RD is like game theory these days. I absolutely would not apply ED/SCEA to Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, Penn, and Duke. Toss those aside. Not happening for an unhooked kid from the DMV burbs. MIT doesn't care about ED so would apply RD if interested. But don't bother with restricted early.
I would look at your high school's college admissions from the past couple of years. Often, selective colleges are partial to certain high schools. And if your high school has had success with schools that your DC is interested in, consider it. And then you're just going to have to settle on your risk tolerance. For highly selective schools like Vanderbilt and Brown, it really is carnage in the regular decision round. But early action is at least possible. But if you choose wrong, then you're consigned to the chaos of regular decision.
On the other hand, if the kid really likes something a little lower ranked and with better odds, it can be the best call to apply early there. Provided that's someplace they really want to go and they don't get stuck wondering about other possibilities.
Not true. Unhooked Kids get in ED to some of those schools in DMV burbs on a somewhat regular basis. Heck, very top unhooked kids get into those in RD it is just much more rare than ED and they have to be truly top in everything
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good grades/scores/rigor/extracurriculars.
What was (or will be) your ED strategy and why?
1)Lottery an elite school. Maybe 10-12% chance instead of <5%. (random example: Duke)
2)Better odds at a school a level down (with an ED rate of 30% instead of 15%). (random example: Boston College).
If the kid is truly elite: top-smarts , creative, with good LOR, they do not need to ED. They will get into multiple T20 in RD. The lucky ones/most impressive will get some T10s in RD.
ED should only be if they have a true #1.
This. My unhooked kid got in RD at two Ivies, Hopkins, SLAC with 5% acceptance and 2 T20s.
Didn’t do any ED/ED2
Anonymous wrote:What about ED to Dartmouth, Cornell or UVA? Does it confer an advantage for an unhooked applicant over RD (Dartmouth and Cornell) or EA (UVA)?
Anonymous wrote:The reality for unhooked kids is that applying ED, SCEA, EA, and RD is like game theory these days. I absolutely would not apply ED/SCEA to Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, Penn, and Duke. Toss those aside. Not happening for an unhooked kid from the DMV burbs. MIT doesn't care about ED so would apply RD if interested. But don't bother with restricted early.
I would look at your high school's college admissions from the past couple of years. Often, selective colleges are partial to certain high schools. And if your high school has had success with schools that your DC is interested in, consider it. And then you're just going to have to settle on your risk tolerance. For highly selective schools like Vanderbilt and Brown, it really is carnage in the regular decision round. But early action is at least possible. But if you choose wrong, then you're consigned to the chaos of regular decision.
On the other hand, if the kid really likes something a little lower ranked and with better odds, it can be the best call to apply early there. Provided that's someplace they really want to go and they don't get stuck wondering about other possibilities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good grades/scores/rigor/extracurriculars.
What was (or will be) your ED strategy and why?
1)Lottery an elite school. Maybe 10-12% chance instead of <5%. (random example: Duke)
2)Better odds at a school a level down (with an ED rate of 30% instead of 15%). (random example: Boston College).
If the kid is truly elite: top-smarts , creative, with good LOR, they do not need to ED. They will get into multiple T20 in RD. The lucky ones/most impressive will get some T10s in RD.
ED should only be if they have a true #1.
Anonymous wrote:The reality for unhooked kids is that applying ED, SCEA, EA, and RD is like game theory these days. I absolutely would not apply ED/SCEA to Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, Penn, and Duke. Toss those aside. Not happening for an unhooked kid from the DMV burbs. MIT doesn't care about ED so would apply RD if interested. But don't bother with restricted early.
I would look at your high school's college admissions from the past couple of years. Often, selective colleges are partial to certain high schools. And if your high school has had success with schools that your DC is interested in, consider it. And then you're just going to have to settle on your risk tolerance. For highly selective schools like Vanderbilt and Brown, it really is carnage in the regular decision round. But early action is at least possible. But if you choose wrong, then you're consigned to the chaos of regular decision.
On the other hand, if the kid really likes something a little lower ranked and with better odds, it can be the best call to apply early there. Provided that's someplace they really want to go and they don't get stuck wondering about other possibilities.
Anonymous wrote:The reality for unhooked kids is that applying ED, SCEA, EA, and RD is like game theory these days. I absolutely would not apply ED/SCEA to Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, Penn, and Duke. Toss those aside. Not happening for an unhooked kid from the DMV burbs. MIT doesn't care about ED so would apply RD if interested. But don't bother with restricted early.
I would look at your high school's college admissions from the past couple of years. Often, selective colleges are partial to certain high schools. And if your high school has had success with schools that your DC is interested in, consider it. And then you're just going to have to settle on your risk tolerance. For highly selective schools like Vanderbilt and Brown, it really is carnage in the regular decision round. But early action is at least possible. But if you choose wrong, then you're consigned to the chaos of regular decision.
On the other hand, if the kid really likes something a little lower ranked and with better odds, it can be the best call to apply early there. Provided that's someplace they really want to go and they don't get stuck wondering about other possibilities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only ED if it is your DC’s absolute first choice.
This is increasingly bad advice. Never ED to a school that you have almost no shot of getting into; that wastes your ED card.
Duke? The majority of non-hooked applicants have a 0% chance of admission, ED or not. This is true for most top schools. A very small minority of non-hooked kids have a much greater chance, whether it is 10, 20, or 30%. If you cannot say with confidence why your kid is in that small minority, you are not buying a lottery ticket (where anyone could win) but throwing away your kid’s chances of getting into a school ED which is the next tier or two down.
Anonymous wrote:Good grades/scores/rigor/extracurriculars.
What was (or will be) your ED strategy and why?
1)Lottery an elite school. Maybe 10-12% chance instead of <5%. (random example: Duke)
2)Better odds at a school a level down (with an ED rate of 30% instead of 15%). (random example: Boston College).