Anonymous wrote:I bet a dollar that OP must not like ED very much because they cannot afford it and are jealous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It won't happen but I will play.
I suspect it would negatively impact students needing financial aid. It's pretty clear colleges use ED to lock in highly qualified full pay students. They need them in order to be able to offer spots to students who can only attend with FA.
My kid got quite a bit of FA during ED, so not for the rich
Anonymous wrote:There would chaos raised to the power of 10 in April, May, June and July. Waitlists would be much longer than they are now to absorb the uncertainties. Dorm spaces might run out at more schools due to underestimating yield. Students would be even more stressed holding out hope that they would be pulled off waitlists. Not a pretty scene.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could be found to violate anti trust law.
A simple solution to any perceived antitrust issues would be for schools to drop the requirement that accepted ED applicants withdraw all of their applications to other schools and, instead, the school would require that anED applicant submit the first semester’s tuition in full within a short designated time following acceptance. If the applicant didn’t submit the tuition, the acceptance would be withdrawn and the application would then be denied.
Anonymous wrote:I bet that a lot more schools would go to rolling admissions. Maybe not constant, but at least waves.
Anonymous wrote:If ED were outlawed then the makers of Viagra would be out of business.
Anonymous wrote:If ED were outlawed then the makers of Viagra would be out of business.