Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC is on a couple Ivy waitlists and it's ridiculous. I know that the likelihood is slim to none, but I still hold out some hope. It's a real schizo state to be in. It makes me question why Ivy's need such a buffer to protect their yield??? And yet, here we are, trying to get in. Ugh. I wish there were some college admissions reform that provides feedback as to why your DC did not get in. I mean they spend so much time on their applications, ECs, grades, etc...I think it's the least colleges can do! Venting.
Pehaps a parental problem?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they ever accept if a child didn’t submit a LOCI? DC is on the waitlist for Princeton and hasn’t submitted one.
Why didn't they submit? This seems like step one.
Received a full ride to another great college after accepting a spot on Princeton’s waitlist. I just wonder if they can still be accepted for my bragging rights (the child doesn’t care). I also wonder if all the kids (especially the first generation ones) know to submit a LOCI. It doesn’t seem that colleges explicitly instruct the waitlisted kids to submit those.
My kid got waitlisted at an ivy and didn’t get a full ride to another great college. It burns to know that people like you are staying on wait lists just so you (the parent!) can have bragging rights if they call you. Why not let Your kid withdraw from the Princeton waitlist so some kid who might actually go will have a better chance?
I was thinking the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they ever accept if a child didn’t submit a LOCI? DC is on the waitlist for Princeton and hasn’t submitted one.
Why didn't they submit? This seems like step one.
Received a full ride to another great college after accepting a spot on Princeton’s waitlist. I just wonder if they can still be accepted for my bragging rights (the child doesn’t care). I also wonder if all the kids (especially the first generation ones) know to submit a LOCI. It doesn’t seem that colleges explicitly instruct the waitlisted kids to submit those.
My kid got waitlisted at an ivy and didn’t get a full ride to another great college. It burns to know that people like you are staying on wait lists just so you (the parent!) can have bragging rights if they call you. Why not let Your kid withdraw from the Princeton waitlist so some kid who might actually go will have a better chance?
Anonymous wrote:Data for Dartmouth in last three years:
19-20 -- 2150 offered WL - O admitted
20-21 -- 2661 offered WL - 95 admitted
21-22 -- 2669 offered WL - O admitted
Seriously do not understand why schools like Dartmouth offer WL to so many -- I guess they do because they can -- there is no downside to the school as they have greater pool of talent to draw from to fine tune their class. But do you need to offer 2600 to fill on average about 30 slots? Maybe they think it of it as a softer form rejection but it also distracts applicants from otherwise fully committing themselves mentally to the school to which they will attend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:''Anonymous wrote:The wait list is a certificate of merit. You were close, but you didn't win.
Not necessarily. It really depends on the school and how well they predicted yield. As PPs have said, I would go to the CC threads for individual colleges and also reference the CDS for the past few years. Last year's CDS will probably be bad because many schools underestimated who would accept admission (of admitted students) and overenrolled. Things could change if they corrected their calculations. Who knows.
But, I don't get why people continually like to weigh in saying WL is just a "you came close." It is what it says it is, a wait list. Some places have likely little movement. Some years calculations have been off. It is fair to say that they clearly WL far more people than they will ever possibly admit.
How is this any different than "you were close, but you didn't win"?
Anonymous wrote:Data for Dartmouth in last three years:
19-20 -- 2150 offered WL - O admitted
20-21 -- 2661 offered WL - 95 admitted
21-22 -- 2669 offered WL - O admitted
Seriously do not understand why schools like Dartmouth offer WL to so many -- I guess they do because they can -- there is no downside to the school as they have greater pool of talent to draw from to fine tune their class. But do you need to offer 2600 to fill on average about 30 slots? Maybe they think it of it as a softer form rejection but it also distracts applicants from otherwise fully committing themselves mentally to the school to which they will attend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they ever accept if a child didn’t submit a LOCI? DC is on the waitlist for Princeton and hasn’t submitted one.
Why didn't they submit? This seems like step one.
Received a full ride to another great college after accepting a spot on Princeton’s waitlist. I just wonder if they can still be accepted for my bragging rights (the child doesn’t care). I also wonder if all the kids (especially the first generation ones) know to submit a LOCI. It doesn’t seem that colleges explicitly instruct the waitlisted kids to submit those.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they ever accept if a child didn’t submit a LOCI? DC is on the waitlist for Princeton and hasn’t submitted one.
Why didn't they submit? This seems like step one.
Received a full ride to another great college after accepting a spot on Princeton’s waitlist. I just wonder if they can still be accepted for my bragging rights (the child doesn’t care). I also wonder if all the kids (especially the first generation ones) know to submit a LOCI. It doesn’t seem that colleges explicitly instruct the waitlisted kids to submit those.
My kid got waitlisted at an ivy and didn’t get a full ride to another great college. It burns to know that people like you are staying on wait lists just so you (the parent!) can have bragging rights if they call you. Why not let Your kid withdraw from the Princeton waitlist so some kid who might actually go will have a better chance?
DP. I get that you're upset but if pp's kid declines the waitlist spot, they move to someone else. They won't have open spots go unfilled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they ever accept if a child didn’t submit a LOCI? DC is on the waitlist for Princeton and hasn’t submitted one.
Why didn't they submit? This seems like step one.
Received a full ride to another great college after accepting a spot on Princeton’s waitlist. I just wonder if they can still be accepted for my bragging rights (the child doesn’t care). I also wonder if all the kids (especially the first generation ones) know to submit a LOCI. It doesn’t seem that colleges explicitly instruct the waitlisted kids to submit those.
My kid got waitlisted at an ivy and didn’t get a full ride to another great college. It burns to know that people like you are staying on wait lists just so you (the parent!) can have bragging rights if they call you. Why not let Your kid withdraw from the Princeton waitlist so some kid who might actually go will have a better chance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they ever accept if a child didn’t submit a LOCI? DC is on the waitlist for Princeton and hasn’t submitted one.
Why didn't they submit? This seems like step one.
Received a full ride to another great college after accepting a spot on Princeton’s waitlist. I just wonder if they can still be accepted for my bragging rights (the child doesn’t care). I also wonder if all the kids (especially the first generation ones) know to submit a LOCI. It doesn’t seem that colleges explicitly instruct the waitlisted kids to submit those.
Anonymous wrote:My DC is on a couple Ivy waitlists and it's ridiculous. I know that the likelihood is slim to none, but I still hold out some hope. It's a real schizo state to be in. It makes me question why Ivy's need such a buffer to protect their yield??? And yet, here we are, trying to get in. Ugh. I wish there were some college admissions reform that provides feedback as to why your DC did not get in. I mean they spend so much time on their applications, ECs, grades, etc...I think it's the least colleges can do! Venting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC is on a couple Ivy waitlists and it's ridiculous. I know that the likelihood is slim to none, but I still hold out some hope. It's a real schizo state to be in. It makes me question why Ivy's need such a buffer to protect their yield??? And yet, here we are, trying to get in. Ugh. I wish there were some college admissions reform that provides feedback as to why your DC did not get in. I mean they spend so much time on their applications, ECs, grades, etc...I think it's the least colleges can do! Venting.
Pehaps a parental problem?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they ever accept if a child didn’t submit a LOCI? DC is on the waitlist for Princeton and hasn’t submitted one.
Why didn't they submit? This seems like step one.