Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SEA is the worst IMO. adds very little benefit and kid can be left with no EA to ease the mind
That isn’t correct. Can still apply to public EA, which is a fair amount of top schools. Can’t do private EA which is a very small group of schools, the most notable being USC, and the EA acceptance rate there lower than RD.
Anonymous wrote:USC is not more notable than MIT or CalTech or ND or Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SEA is the worst IMO. adds very little benefit and kid can be left with no EA to ease the mind
That isn’t correct. Can still apply to public EA, which is a fair amount of top schools. Can’t do private EA which is a very small group of schools, the most notable being USC, and the EA acceptance rate there lower than RD.
Anonymous wrote:SEA is the worst IMO. adds very little benefit and kid can be left with no EA to ease the mind
Anonymous wrote:“The odd thing these days is that most Ivy admits are going to be rejects from their ED schools.”
This makes a lot of intuitive sense given the landscape. Which makes me wonder—should a kid with excellent grades/scores/ECs forgo ED at T5-T20 altogether, and apply widely in RD? Isn’t ED the way the Chicagos and Emorys lock in the risk adverse kids with excellent records?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Yale? Does SCEA give an advantage?
Well, just look at the data. The dirty schools are Harvard, Penn, BU, NYU, Stanford, Columbia, Miami and USC. Add the large percentage of international admissions. And just look at who's admitted.
Your kid from Middle Class High School in Suburban USA is unlikely to be an admit.
I think Yale is a fairly honest admit though. The genuinely smart schools tend to be MIT, CMU, Vanderbilt, Brown, Rice, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, CalTech, Harvey Mudd, Olin, Johns Hopkins, Dartmouth, Williams, West Point, and Annapolis.
And there are a lot of really smart kids at Michigan, UVA, Georgia Tech, and the UCs.
How to play the ED game is going to be situational. Personally, I don't think it's worth throwing that card at HYPSM.
And no, SCEA at Yale isn't going to help even though it's not a horrible school.
If you have a smart kid, be informed. And be strategic.
Every family with a talented kid needs to pay attention. Yale isn't evil. But you need to pay attention. Roughly 58,000 applicants. 2100 admits. And those 58,000 applicants aren't idiots. Choose wisely. The odd thing these days is that most Ivy admits are going to be rejects from their ED schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Yale? Does SCEA give an advantage?
The odd thing these days is that most Ivy admits are going to be rejects from their ED schools.
Why is that? This doesn't make any sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Yale? Does SCEA give an advantage?
Well, just look at the data. The dirty schools are Harvard, Penn, BU, NYU, Stanford, Columbia, Miami and USC. Add the large percentage of international admissions. And just look at who's admitted.
Your kid from Middle Class High School in Suburban USA is unlikely to be an admit.
I think Yale is a fairly honest admit though. The genuinely smart schools tend to be MIT, CMU, Vanderbilt, Brown, Rice, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, CalTech, Harvey Mudd, Olin, Johns Hopkins, Dartmouth, Williams, West Point, and Annapolis.
And there are a lot of really smart kids at Michigan, UVA, Georgia Tech, and the UCs.
How to play the ED game is going to be situational. Personally, I don't think it's worth throwing that card at HYPSM.
And no, SCEA at Yale isn't going to help even though it's not a horrible school.
If you have a smart kid, be informed. And be strategic.
Every family with a talented kid needs to pay attention. Yale isn't evil. But you need to pay attention. Roughly 58,000 applicants. 2100 admits. And those 58,000 applicants aren't idiots. Choose wisely. The odd thing these days is that most Ivy admits are going to be rejects from their ED schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Yale? Does SCEA give an advantage?
Well, just look at the data. The dirty schools are Harvard, Penn, BU, NYU, Stanford, Columbia, Miami and USC. Add the large percentage of international admissions. And just look at who's admitted.
Your kid from Middle Class High School in Suburban USA is unlikely to be an admit.
I think Yale is a fairly honest admit though. The genuinely smart schools tend to be MIT, CMU, Vanderbilt, Brown, Rice, Chicago, Northwestern, Duke, CalTech, Harvey Mudd, Olin, Johns Hopkins, Dartmouth, Williams, West Point, and Annapolis.
And there are a lot of really smart kids at Michigan, UVA, Georgia Tech, and the UCs.
How to play the ED game is going to be situational. Personally, I don't think it's worth throwing that card at HYPSM.
And no, SCEA at Yale isn't going to help even though it's not a horrible school.
If you have a smart kid, be informed. And be strategic.
Every family with a talented kid needs to pay attention. Yale isn't evil. But you need to pay attention. Roughly 58,000 applicants. 2100 admits. And those 58,000 applicants aren't idiots. Choose wisely. The odd thing these days is that most Ivy admits are going to be rejects from their ED schools.
Anonymous wrote:And ED2 at vandy is a scam
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Yale? Does SCEA give an advantage?
The odd thing these days is that most Ivy admits are going to be rejects from their ED schools.
Anonymous wrote:What about Yale? Does SCEA give an advantage?