Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's the thing. Kids aren't certain at this point that they are saying no. At this stage of the game, mine only had 2 likely acceptances. Even after getting several T15 and top LAC admits in RD, she wasn't sure she wanted to say No to the 2 likelies because she had sought to find what was great about them. And, she thought they were fantastic. So, she needed to see everything. Once she went to admitted students' events, she was certain of a few she could cut. But, it took a while to whittle it down. Don't push a kid to say No too early. They need to be sure. And, as another PP said, I doubt it will make a big difference for ids waiting. They have algorithms for these things. Hang in there. The waiting is hard! All good things to those waiting!
VBA
What does vba mean?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's the thing. Kids aren't certain at this point that they are saying no. At this stage of the game, mine only had 2 likely acceptances. Even after getting several T15 and top LAC admits in RD, she wasn't sure she wanted to say No to the 2 likelies because she had sought to find what was great about them. And, she thought they were fantastic. So, she needed to see everything. Once she went to admitted students' events, she was certain of a few she could cut. But, it took a while to whittle it down. Don't push a kid to say No too early. They need to be sure. And, as another PP said, I doubt it will make a big difference for ids waiting. They have algorithms for these things. Hang in there. The waiting is hard! All good things to those waiting!
VBA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools know a large percentage will decline and they’ve already factored this in. My child is still unsure and we’ll likely wait until May because declining isn’t going to magically open a spot for someone else.
This makes it sound like waitlist is actually a rejection.
Anonymous wrote:Hi - as many RD decisions are approaching, if your DC knows they won’t be attending a school at which they’ve been accepted, please have them decline. It may open up an opportunity for someone who has it as their dream school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools know a large percentage will decline and they’ve already factored this in. My child is still unsure and we’ll likely wait until May because declining isn’t going to magically open a spot for someone else.
This makes it sound like waitlist is actually a rejection.
Anonymous wrote:Schools know a large percentage will decline and they’ve already factored this in. My child is still unsure and we’ll likely wait until May because declining isn’t going to magically open a spot for someone else.
Anonymous wrote:Do all schools require acceptance of offer by May 1? Does that mean that the WL status doesn't change after that date? How does that work? Let's say a kid wants to go to the WL school and gets the offer mid-May, do they just withdraw the acceptance at whatever school they said yes to originally? Are there fees associated with that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that schools are stressed about yield. But it’s stressful for my kid, too. Rejected at ED choice, in at both “likelies,” deferred at all other EA schools. We are trying to stay enthusiastic about both likelies as there is a very good chance those are the only options, but it would feel really crappy to make her choose between those now when she already has fewer options at this point than she hoped. So nope, we are not declining any yet.
She chose those schools already by applying to them. I hope you don't communicate the message that having to go to one of them is a "crappy" option. You are not helping her be positive.
People, the most likely schools that your kids will get into are their "likelies." That is literally what (most) likely means.
Wrap your head around it the whole time, not at the end in shock and dismay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t work like that OP.
How does it work?
By this point decisions have been made. Maybe your kid is on the waitlist and that slot will open up because an EA student drops but it won’t matter at this stage before the decisions are released in a few weeks.
So the same principle applies. Maybe it will open a spot to someone on the waitlist.
Don't be a selfish dick and hold a spot you have no intention of taking. Just b/c you can, doesn't mean you should. And a decent person would relinquish it.
(And before the snarky "sorry you're kid didn't get accepted" comments, my kid is not graduating and headed to college this year).
Anonymous wrote:These schools are on my last nerve!! They ask you to decline now if you’re not going to accept (I am looking at you Denison). They created the deadline date and a student has every right to use it. May 1 is the decision date. The End. Rant over.
Anonymous wrote:NP. We received an email from Denison asking DC to withdraw their application now if they knew they would not attend to maybe "give another deserving student an opportunity for consideration."
DC is leaning toward a different school but I assumed that the request was more about their stats than anything else.