Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protection
Agree. This exceptionally weird for a male English major.
It has to be yield protection or something off with his application. I would run everything by a college counselor. Good luck! He'll land somewhere great.
No yield protection with ED decisions. They are binding
Deferrals for 'sure things' are common yield protection tactics in T1-T30s. Schools that know you will come--legacy, first choice, counselor tells them first choice, etc. will often yield protect to pick up other qualified kids in the early rounds. It certainly happens. But, rejection is not a yield protection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.7 uw 4.5 W
11 APs
TO
Decent ecs
differed
BC is now test-recommended. If your scores are close, consider submitting.
BC still admits fewer than half of its freshmen TO. Be careful of going TO if you attend a resource-rich high school and/or come from a high socio-economic environment. Landscape and other programs provide granular neighboorhood data to admissions.
How granular?! Zip code or actual street/neighborhood?
Census tract, I believe. But to the larger point, as the results posted here show, plenty of kids from affluent backgrounds get in TO. In fact it may be easier for kids from known high schools to get in TO. BC knows exactly what your grades mean at SJC. If you’re applying from a relatively unknown high school, you might need scores to validate your grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protection
No yield protection in ED round, kid has already agree to attend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protection
Agree. This exceptionally weird for a male English major.
It has to be yield protection or something off with his application. I would run everything by a college counselor. Good luck! He'll land somewhere great.
No yield protection with ED decisions. They are binding
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
This is Rey unexpected, I would take another look at his essays and recommenders to make sure they are ok. What are his extracurriculars?
.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protection
Agree. This exceptionally weird for a male English major.
It has to be yield protection or something off with his application. I would run everything by a college counselor. Good luck! He'll land somewhere great.
Anonymous wrote:He applied ED, genius.Anonymous wrote:Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protectionAnonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protection
Agree. This exceptionally weird for a male English major.
It has to be yield protection or something off with his application. I would run everything by a college counselor. Good luck! He'll land somewhere great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protection
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protection
He applied ED, genius.Anonymous wrote:Those are good stats, I wonder if this is yield protectionAnonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Anonymous wrote:3.98, 1570, 15 APs by grad, applied for English and rejected. He's very bummed, but we're ready to kick back into the next college.
Anonymous wrote:What the above poster is saying is that Boston College will be releasing their Early Decision I decisions this evening. That was communicated to the public through BC's Instagram account.
They are quite excited and are looking forward to it.