Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do any privates offer EA (not REA or SCEA)?
Yes, though you'd have to check each one's website. Northeastern, Case Western, Tulane, Villanova, Santa Clara, LMU, TCU, SMU, etc
Anonymous wrote:Do any privates offer EA (not REA or SCEA)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, DS applied ED to an Ivy and EA to UChicago. DS was dead set on the Ivy but curious about UChicago acceptance. DS accepted the Ivy but waited to withdraw EA application for one week to get results. As soon as, DS got the EA results, he literally withdrew seconds after the results. ED admissions require immediate withdrawal of other applications when accepted.
Though, I reprimanded DD, I admit I was also curious about the results. I would never recommend anyone take a chance. If an ED school finds out there is another active app out there, you can lose everything.
You're lucky the counselor didnt rat you out. It reflects badly on the school and the college could be reluctant to take future students ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ED is affirmative action for the financially well off. SCEA and REA are great because they are non-binding and allow students to apply EA and rolling to public and international universities.
REA allows students to apply EA anywhere...just not ED.
Anonymous wrote:ED is affirmative action for the financially well off. SCEA and REA are great because they are non-binding and allow students to apply EA and rolling to public and international universities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, DS applied ED to an Ivy and EA to UChicago. DS was dead set on the Ivy but curious about UChicago acceptance. DS accepted the Ivy but waited to withdraw EA application for one week to get results. As soon as, DS got the EA results, he literally withdrew seconds after the results. ED admissions require immediate withdrawal of other applications when accepted.
Though, I reprimanded DD, I admit I was also curious about the results. I would never recommend anyone take a chance. If an ED school finds out there is another active app out there, you can lose everything.
You're lucky the counselor didnt rat you out. It reflects badly on the school and the college could be reluctant to take future students ED.
Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, DS applied ED to an Ivy and EA to UChicago. DS was dead set on the Ivy but curious about UChicago acceptance. DS accepted the Ivy but waited to withdraw EA application for one week to get results. As soon as, DS got the EA results, he literally withdrew seconds after the results. ED admissions require immediate withdrawal of other applications when accepted.
Though, I reprimanded DD, I admit I was also curious about the results. I would never recommend anyone take a chance. If an ED school finds out there is another active app out there, you can lose everything.
Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, DS applied ED to an Ivy and EA to UChicago. DS was dead set on the Ivy but curious about UChicago acceptance. DS accepted the Ivy but waited to withdraw EA application for one week to get results. As soon as, DS got the EA results, he literally withdrew seconds after the results. ED admissions require immediate withdrawal of other applications when accepted.
Though, I reprimanded DD, I admit I was also curious about the results. I would never recommend anyone take a chance. If an ED school finds out there is another active app out there, you can lose everything.
Anonymous wrote:Not really. SCEA schools still allow applications to state schools, so EA is possible if the state school allows it.