Anonymous wrote:Every kid I know who got in ED this past year had lesser stats than those who got in regular.
Anonymous wrote:UVA says it does not give an advantage. Can someone explain how the ED stats show UVA is lying?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just went on a tour and someone asked about ED and whether there is an admissions advantage and what they said was surprising. There isn't any.
ED in-state acceptance rate was 30% last year. EA in-state was 28% last year. The pool of ED applicants was about 4.5K and only 782 in-state students were accepted ED.
Someone mentioned that the only reason to apply ED vs. EA is trying to get what is essentially a demonstrated interest boost by signing the binding contract. But UVA doesn't consider demonstrated interest, and the differences in admission rates are not significant. It might actually be harder to get into ED vs. EA because a lot of recruited athletes apply ED and it is enough to skew the numbers.
Anyways, the benefits of ED simply aren't there beyond a 1.5 month earlier decision. EA will have similar admission criteria, but allow you to see what other schools you got into and what amounts of aid they are offering.
I just don't see the advantage and a bunch of disadvantages of ED for UVA. Both ED and EA provide admissions advantages over the RD in-state rate of 16%.
This is true of every school. The only reason ED admission rates are higher is because the athletes and priority students apply then.
Take out those applicants and the admission rate for unhooked applicants are pretty much the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one can know everyone’s stats, essays, recs, etc of course…but there is still the sense that ED gives a tiny bit of a boost for some kids in our huge public HS.
The stats just don't bear this out. I only posted this because I think there is a big misperception there is an advantage and it seems completely illusory. I was shocked when I read the stats after the tour. I think a lot of parents and rising seniors will be very surprised. EA or ED provides a boost over RD, but the ED over EA advantages just aren't there to give up your ability to apply other schools and see what your options are.
Many parents told me ED gives an advantage. But it is only over RD, not EA. UVA's ED system doesn't appear to be a method to manipulate yield like schools like UChicago and Tulane do, or even Dartmouth. The EA is a much more attractive option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They say it doesn't matter, but the year Dc graduated HS in 22, the difference between ED acceptance in state and EA accepting in state was 8%. So, it did matter, and DC got in ED.
The difference between ED instate acceptance and EA acceptance changes each year, it's hard to predict.
The trend is increasing applications for ED and keeping the ED admissions about the same. It narrowed to 4% for class of 2023, and then 2% in class of 2024.
It isn't a wild trendline. The ties to the staff saying there is no advantage. Remember ED includes a lot of recruited athletes in that 700 or so ED acceptance pool.
Just stating parent's talking about this ED advantage from years ago is like them saying stuff like VT has a 70% acceptance rate or JMU has a 90% acceptance rate, when things have really changed the last few years.