Anonymous wrote:[
Yes, and there’s nothing she can do to change what her child’s profile is, but she can put a positive flag on her child’s application. There will be many people writing in to say that the school is their first choice. What do you want to be? Another piece of paperwork or someone who seems like a real person?
Though they try to keep it real, the application process is mindnumbingly full of paperwork for admissions office staff. By the end of the process, almost everyone is just a piece of paper.
There’s a difference between a suck up letter and one that is sincere and heartfelt. I’m sure you have no idea of the difference.
As someone whose child was admitted to a Big 3 off a waitlist after writing such a letter, forgive me if I disagree with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call the AD and simply ask:
Is DC's position on the WL high enough that they may be made an offer of Admission by deposit deadline ( March ? 21st )
If the AD hedges at all..... that is a NO and go with the school that wants your child and don't look back
Once you are inside many schools are different that your first impression . The ADs have been doing this for decades most of them.
You are on your 1st rodeo, likely
If they REALLY wanted your DC or want them on high WL they would have admitted your DC or high WL them
Very helpful! Should I avoid mentioning the other school's offer when talking to the top choice's AD? Thank you!
AD's do talk to each other so this is a reasonable question to ask.
What you DON'T want to do is make the AD of the school that accepted your child ( your 2nd choice school ) aware that they are, just that: 2nd choice
Especially because if your DC ends up going there you don't want to 1) have to live that down and 2) you may be surprised to find choice # 2 was actually the better school for your child in the end
I would just stick to the wording:
" insert name of school" is our absolute 1st choice of school for our DC and we want to make clear that if a position becomes available just before deposit deadline, our family will accept and pay full tuition at that time" " However, if you know this is unlikely at this time, we wish to commit to the school that has offered a position as it is our family's position that we want to fully commit to a school by ( deposit date in March)
In other words: present yourself as the OPPOSITE as a bet hedger . You know, the kind of parent that is ruining the whole process for everyone by paying deposits at 2 schools then backing out on May 31st, etc.
Present yourselves as a family who will commit fully at March deadline and if you don't get an offer of admission by the AM of day before , then sign that contract at 2nd choice school and don't look back
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
OP, you should definitely write to your top choice school, but don’t make it bland and business-like.
Write to the school and tell them everything you loved about it — include specific details that show how well you came to know the school — and why you believe your child would thrive and contribute to that school’s community. Make it a heartfelt letter that sings. Put thoughtful effort into it. If you’re a terrible writer, work with someone who is great at it.
At this point, it’s the only thing that will make you stand out beyond th facts you can’t control. Admissions people are human. Like any of us, they can be swayed by genuine appreciation for their school and a strong, clear desire to attend.
Blech. OP, just be yourself in the letter, not who this person tells you you should be.
This is about your child and their fit into an incoming class. There is nothing a glowing suck up letter can change. Let the school know you are interested in remaining on the WL, then move on.
Yes, and there’s nothing she can do to change what her child’s profile is, but she can put a positive flag on her child’s application. There will be many people writing in to say that the school is their first choice. What do you want to be? Another piece of paperwork or someone who seems like a real person?
Though they try to keep it real, the application process is mindnumbingly full of paperwork for admissions office staff. By the end of the process, almost everyone is just a piece of paper.
There’s a difference between a suck up letter and one that is sincere and heartfelt. I’m sure you have no idea of the difference.
As someone whose child was admitted to a Big 3 off a waitlist after writing such a letter, forgive me if I disagree with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call the AD and simply ask:
Is DC's position on the WL high enough that they may be made an offer of Admission by deposit deadline ( March ? 21st )
If the AD hedges at all..... that is a NO and go with the school that wants your child and don't look back
Once you are inside many schools are different that your first impression . The ADs have been doing this for decades most of them.
You are on your 1st rodeo, likely
If they REALLY wanted your DC or want them on high WL they would have admitted your DC or high WL them
Very helpful! Should I avoid mentioning the other school's offer when talking to the top choice's AD? Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was us. We attended the accepted student events at the other schools, and DC let the WL school know it was first choice.
Then we told DC to assume the WL was a no, make a choice between the other four options (one of which was the neighborhood public - we always included that in the mix), and if anything changed, we'd revisit the decision. DC requested another shadow day at one of the schools, and that sealed the deal. We sent decline notices to the other accepted schools, paid the deposit on time, and waited to hear from the WL school until the last day when the contract was due. We didn't hear and so sent in the contract (on the final day). DC is very happy, and is clearly in the right place.
Never got off the WL, btw, though we heard that someone else did.
Congratulations on having choices.
OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
OP, you should definitely write to your top choice school, but don’t make it bland and business-like.
Write to the school and tell them everything you loved about it — include specific details that show how well you came to know the school — and why you believe your child would thrive and contribute to that school’s community. Make it a heartfelt letter that sings. Put thoughtful effort into it. If you’re a terrible writer, work with someone who is great at it.
At this point, it’s the only thing that will make you stand out beyond th facts you can’t control. Admissions people are human. Like any of us, they can be swayed by genuine appreciation for their school and a strong, clear desire to attend.
Blech. OP, just be yourself in the letter, not who this person tells you you should be.
This is about your child and their fit into an incoming class. There is nothing a glowing suck up letter can change. Let the school know you are interested in remaining on the WL, then move on.
Good advice! We are not connected to any of the schools that we applied to and honestly don't see many differences between the "big 3-10." We feel that we said everything in our parent questionnaires. We will just go with one that accepted DC and wait quietly for those put us in their wls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
OP, you should definitely write to your top choice school, but don’t make it bland and business-like.
Write to the school and tell them everything you loved about it — include specific details that show how well you came to know the school — and why you believe your child would thrive and contribute to that school’s community. Make it a heartfelt letter that sings. Put thoughtful effort into it. If you’re a terrible writer, work with someone who is great at it.
At this point, it’s the only thing that will make you stand out beyond th facts you can’t control. Admissions people are human. Like any of us, they can be swayed by genuine appreciation for their school and a strong, clear desire to attend.
Blech. OP, just be yourself in the letter, not who this person tells you you should be.
This is about your child and their fit into an incoming class. There is nothing a glowing suck up letter can change. Let the school know you are interested in remaining on the WL, then move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
OP, you should definitely write to your top choice school, but don’t make it bland and business-like.
Write to the school and tell them everything you loved about it — include specific details that show how well you came to know the school — and why you believe your child would thrive and contribute to that school’s community. Make it a heartfelt letter that sings. Put thoughtful effort into it. If you’re a terrible writer, work with someone who is great at it.
At this point, it’s the only thing that will make you stand out beyond th facts you can’t control. Admissions people are human. Like any of us, they can be swayed by genuine appreciation for their school and a strong, clear desire to attend.
Blech. OP, just be yourself in the letter, not who this person tells you you should be.
This is about your child and their fit into an incoming class. There is nothing a glowing suck up letter can change. Let the school know you are interested in remaining on the WL, then move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you all for your inputs! Now I really don't know if we should write to our top choice to show our continued interest (I heard this sometimes helps) or just stay on the wl quietly...
OP, you should definitely write to your top choice school, but don’t make it bland and business-like.
Write to the school and tell them everything you loved about it — include specific details that show how well you came to know the school — and why you believe your child would thrive and contribute to that school’s community. Make it a heartfelt letter that sings. Put thoughtful effort into it. If you’re a terrible writer, work with someone who is great at it.
At this point, it’s the only thing that will make you stand out beyond th facts you can’t control. Admissions people are human. Like any of us, they can be swayed by genuine appreciation for their school and a strong, clear desire to attend.
Blech. OP, just be yourself in the letter, not who this person tells you you should be.
Anonymous wrote:DC was WL at 1st choice, accepted at 2nd choice. We made the deposit and started working on loving the 2nd choice. Didn’t get a WL offer; no regrets.