Anonymous wrote:My kid applied early to her RD schools because it was easier to do it as the same time as EA/ED and she wanted to be able to stop thinking about it. There's no reason to think there's an admissions advantage.
Anonymous wrote:Would applying RD by Nov. 1 be a way to demonstrate interest to a school that tracks interest (e.g. William & Mary)? Are applications reviewed as they come in or do AOs wait until the RD deadline to review all together?Wondering if it’s worth it for DD to push to get her RD apps done by Nov. 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applying early can be critical to securing an interview slot. Most schools offer interviews on a first come, first served basis.
Most schools that use interview allow you to schedule interviews before applying.
none of the ivies do this, nor does Duke or Northwestern.
But those schools also have no advantage in getting an interview when applying early. They reach out to you, not vice versa. They are also alum interviews, not admissions office interviews. My point was that for schools where the student schedules with admissions, most will let you set up and even do the interview before applying.
What's the difference?
Alum reviews are part of admissions, and an influential factor.
Ah, that must be how Duke keeps its douche ratio so high. I'd always wondered!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applying early can be critical to securing an interview slot. Most schools offer interviews on a first come, first served basis.
Most schools that use interview allow you to schedule interviews before applying.
none of the ivies do this, nor does Duke or Northwestern.
But those schools also have no advantage in getting an interview when applying early. They reach out to you, not vice versa. They are also alum interviews, not admissions office interviews. My point was that for schools where the student schedules with admissions, most will let you set up and even do the interview before applying.
What's the difference?
Alum reviews are part of admissions, and an influential factor.
They are not influential. Alumni interviews are more to keep alumni involved (and therefore donating) than to help with the admissions process.
-ivy alumni interviewer
They are at Duke. - Blue Devil alumni interviewer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applying early can be critical to securing an interview slot. Most schools offer interviews on a first come, first served basis.
Most schools that use interview allow you to schedule interviews before applying.
none of the ivies do this, nor does Duke or Northwestern.
But those schools also have no advantage in getting an interview when applying early. They reach out to you, not vice versa. They are also alum interviews, not admissions office interviews. My point was that for schools where the student schedules with admissions, most will let you set up and even do the interview before applying.
What's the difference?
Alum reviews are part of admissions, and an influential factor.
They are not influential. Alumni interviews are more to keep alumni involved (and therefore donating) than to help with the admissions process.
-ivy alumni interviewer
Anonymous wrote:DD is looking at a couple schools that offer ED but not EA. She will need academic merit or a talent scholarship to attend these schools. We don't have the budget to apply ED but know that merit is sometimes exhausted early in the process. Does it make sense to apply early (like November 1) as a RD applicant? Do AOs even read applications before the RD deadline?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applying early can be critical to securing an interview slot. Most schools offer interviews on a first come, first served basis.
Most schools that use interview allow you to schedule interviews before applying.
none of the ivies do this, nor does Duke or Northwestern.
But those schools also have no advantage in getting an interview when applying early. They reach out to you, not vice versa. They are also alum interviews, not admissions office interviews. My point was that for schools where the student schedules with admissions, most will let you set up and even do the interview before applying.
What's the difference?
Alum reviews are part of admissions, and an influential factor.