Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do they really look for between ED and Deferral / RD decisions for those that have been deferred the past?
Is it only gpa increase?
Does your post mean UVA back to deferring those not accepted at ED? I thought at one point they moved to either accept or reject at ED and no deferrals. When did they go back to doing deferrals?
We know several who were admitted over the summer off of the waitlist who were originally deferred ED fwiw. Two of them accepted right before school started and are first years now.
They only did this for the class of 2024. They went back to including deferrals for the class of 2025.
FWIW I don't know anyone who was accepted after a deferral last for the class of 2025. That can obviously change year to year, but did want to share.
Anonymous wrote:What do they really look for between ED and Deferral / RD decisions for those that have been deferred the past?
Is it only gpa increase?
Anonymous wrote:Last year had a 3% deferral admit rate when it was all said and done. I would encourage your child to move on, fall in love with another school. If the 3% odds end up being in your favor, that would be a wonderful surprise, but I sure wouldn’t hold out for that.
Anonymous wrote:Private school. I’m looking at SCOIR and in 2025 all UVA deferrals were waitlisted in RD except one person who was accepted in RD.
Anonymous wrote:I know a deferred kid last year who had very good grades/scores and did everything they could to get in (sending in grades all year--all As, sending in a rec from from a person prominent at UVA, etc) and nothing worked. They were never admitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Last year had a 3% deferral admit rate when it was all said and done. I would encourage your child to move on, fall in love with another school. If the 3% odds end up being in your favor, that would be a wonderful surprise, but I sure wouldn’t hold out for that.
This is the info op needs. The rest is anecdotal.
Anonymous wrote:Last year had a 3% deferral admit rate when it was all said and done. I would encourage your child to move on, fall in love with another school. If the 3% odds end up being in your favor, that would be a wonderful surprise, but I sure wouldn’t hold out for that.