Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the emphasis on demonstrated interest is incredibly lame. this is gamesmanship 101
Then it is lame for Dartmouth, Northwestern, UChicago, Rice, and others I guess...?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another way to increase the denominator and drive down the acceptance rate. No self-respecting school removes or cuts down on supplemental essays.
IMO, WashU only appeals to strivers.
Nope. We know many students there. Just a lot of exceptionally bright, dynamic kids. The only thing that WashU lacks is name recognition in some parts of the country, but that is rapidly changing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another way to increase the denominator and drive down the acceptance rate. No self-respecting school removes or cuts down on supplemental essays.
IMO, WashU only appeals to strivers.
Nope. We know many students there. Just a lot of exceptionally bright, dynamic kids. The only thing that WashU lacks is name recognition in some parts of the country, but that is rapidly changing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure out the downside of applying Early Action here? Particularly since it is now a pretty easy application? Get it done and get your response early. Probably not early enough to save you from doing other apps but early enough to know you are in somewhere if you get in.
If it’s being done to game rankings…they add EA to get more applicants. Then at some point EA applicants will be asked to switch to ED with the implication being you’re rejected if you don’t.
As an aside, my son applied to two EA schools. Both invited him to switch to ED. He didn’t. Accepted to both with giant merit scholarships (both schools don’t give merit to ED candidates).
The number of applications, yield, and acceptance or admissions rate are NOT part of the USNWR rankings. So posters who are ill informed should drop their claims that this is to game rankings. If schools want to "game" rankings, they can seek to increase the intake of first gen, increase the graduation rate of disadvantaged or Pell grant recipients (is the school good for social and economic mobility) , etc. Not that there is anything wrong with this but be informed. Look up the criteria.
True enough about the rankings.
But if you spend any time on this board, you’ll see that private school parents distrust rankings, and instead of chasing the school with the best ranking or the highest test scores, chase schools with the lowest admission rates. And schools like Wash U need to stay popular with the private school set to make budget.
You write of private school parents like they are evil or something. Sorry about your financial inferiority complex. FFS.
Anonymous wrote:Another way to increase the denominator and drive down the acceptance rate. No self-respecting school removes or cuts down on supplemental essays.
IMO, WashU only appeals to strivers.
Anonymous wrote:Another way to increase the denominator and drive down the acceptance rate. No self-respecting school removes or cuts down on supplemental essays.
IMO, WashU only appeals to strivers.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is heading to an ivy unhooked so I say this as someone whose kid wrote good essays:
The essays- esp supplementals -are a system that can be gamed. Getting rid of them makes perfect sense. They do not provide that much info on a kid bc of heavy editing but mostly bc kids who are applying to highly rejective schools either figure out how to write the essays or don’t. This is a game and waste of our kids’ time.
Get rid of them!!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure out the downside of applying Early Action here? Particularly since it is now a pretty easy application? Get it done and get your response early. Probably not early enough to save you from doing other apps but early enough to know you are in somewhere if you get in.
If it’s being done to game rankings…they add EA to get more applicants. Then at some point EA applicants will be asked to switch to ED with the implication being you’re rejected if you don’t.
As an aside, my son applied to two EA schools. Both invited him to switch to ED. He didn’t. Accepted to both with giant merit scholarships (both schools don’t give merit to ED candidates).
The number of applications, yield, and acceptance or admissions rate are NOT part of the USNWR rankings. So posters who are ill informed should drop their claims that this is to game rankings. If schools want to "game" rankings, they can seek to increase the intake of first gen, increase the graduation rate of disadvantaged or Pell grant recipients (is the school good for social and economic mobility) , etc. Not that there is anything wrong with this but be informed. Look up the criteria.
True enough about the rankings.
But if you spend any time on this board, you’ll see that private school parents distrust rankings, and instead of chasing the school with the best ranking or the highest test scores, chase schools with the lowest admission rates. And schools like Wash U need to stay popular with the private school set to make budget.
You write of private school parents like they are evil or something. Sorry about your financial inferiority complex. FFS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure out the downside of applying Early Action here? Particularly since it is now a pretty easy application? Get it done and get your response early. Probably not early enough to save you from doing other apps but early enough to know you are in somewhere if you get in.
If it’s being done to game rankings…they add EA to get more applicants. Then at some point EA applicants will be asked to switch to ED with the implication being you’re rejected if you don’t.
As an aside, my son applied to two EA schools. Both invited him to switch to ED. He didn’t. Accepted to both with giant merit scholarships (both schools don’t give merit to ED candidates).
The number of applications, yield, and acceptance or admissions rate are NOT part of the USNWR rankings. So posters who are ill informed should drop their claims that this is to game rankings. If schools want to "game" rankings, they can seek to increase the intake of first gen, increase the graduation rate of disadvantaged or Pell grant recipients (is the school good for social and economic mobility) , etc. Not that there is anything wrong with this but be informed. Look up the criteria.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure out the downside of applying Early Action here? Particularly since it is now a pretty easy application? Get it done and get your response early. Probably not early enough to save you from doing other apps but early enough to know you are in somewhere if you get in.
If it’s being done to game rankings…they add EA to get more applicants. Then at some point EA applicants will be asked to switch to ED with the implication being you’re rejected if you don’t.
As an aside, my son applied to two EA schools. Both invited him to switch to ED. He didn’t. Accepted to both with giant merit scholarships (both schools don’t give merit to ED candidates).
The number of applications, yield, and acceptance or admissions rate are NOT part of the USNWR rankings. So posters who are ill informed should drop their claims that this is to game rankings. If schools want to "game" rankings, they can seek to increase the intake of first gen, increase the graduation rate of disadvantaged or Pell grant recipients (is the school good for social and economic mobility) , etc. Not that there is anything wrong with this but be informed. Look up the criteria.
True enough about the rankings.
But if you spend any time on this board, you’ll see that private school parents distrust rankings, and instead of chasing the school with the best ranking or the highest test scores, chase schools with the lowest admission rates. And schools like Wash U need to stay popular with the private school set to make budget.
You write of private school parents like they are evil or something. Sorry about your financial inferiority complex. FFS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure out the downside of applying Early Action here? Particularly since it is now a pretty easy application? Get it done and get your response early. Probably not early enough to save you from doing other apps but early enough to know you are in somewhere if you get in.
If it’s being done to game rankings…they add EA to get more applicants. Then at some point EA applicants will be asked to switch to ED with the implication being you’re rejected if you don’t.
As an aside, my son applied to two EA schools. Both invited him to switch to ED. He didn’t. Accepted to both with giant merit scholarships (both schools don’t give merit to ED candidates).
The number of applications, yield, and acceptance or admissions rate are NOT part of the USNWR rankings. So posters who are ill informed should drop their claims that this is to game rankings. If schools want to "game" rankings, they can seek to increase the intake of first gen, increase the graduation rate of disadvantaged or Pell grant recipients (is the school good for social and economic mobility) , etc. Not that there is anything wrong with this but be informed. Look up the criteria.
True enough about the rankings.
But if you spend any time on this board, you’ll see that private school parents distrust rankings, and instead of chasing the school with the best ranking or the highest test scores, chase schools with the lowest admission rates. And schools like Wash U need to stay popular with the private school set to make budget.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure out the downside of applying Early Action here? Particularly since it is now a pretty easy application? Get it done and get your response early. Probably not early enough to save you from doing other apps but early enough to know you are in somewhere if you get in.
If it’s being done to game rankings…they add EA to get more applicants. Then at some point EA applicants will be asked to switch to ED with the implication being you’re rejected if you don’t.
As an aside, my son applied to two EA schools. Both invited him to switch to ED. He didn’t. Accepted to both with giant merit scholarships (both schools don’t give merit to ED candidates).
The number of applications, yield, and acceptance or admissions rate are NOT part of the USNWR rankings. So posters who are ill informed should drop their claims that this is to game rankings. If schools want to "game" rankings, they can seek to increase the intake of first gen, increase the graduation rate of disadvantaged or Pell grant recipients (is the school good for social and economic mobility) , etc. Not that there is anything wrong with this but be informed. Look up the criteria.
True enough about the rankings.
But if you spend any time on this board, you’ll see that private school parents distrust rankings, and instead of chasing the school with the best ranking or the highest test scores, chase schools with the lowest admission rates. And schools like Wash U need to stay popular with the private school set to make budget.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am trying to figure out the downside of applying Early Action here? Particularly since it is now a pretty easy application? Get it done and get your response early. Probably not early enough to save you from doing other apps but early enough to know you are in somewhere if you get in.
If it’s being done to game rankings…they add EA to get more applicants. Then at some point EA applicants will be asked to switch to ED with the implication being you’re rejected if you don’t.
As an aside, my son applied to two EA schools. Both invited him to switch to ED. He didn’t. Accepted to both with giant merit scholarships (both schools don’t give merit to ED candidates).
The number of applications, yield, and acceptance or admissions rate are NOT part of the USNWR rankings. So posters who are ill informed should drop their claims that this is to game rankings. If schools want to "game" rankings, they can seek to increase the intake of first gen, increase the graduation rate of disadvantaged or Pell grant recipients (is the school good for social and economic mobility) , etc. Not that there is anything wrong with this but be informed. Look up the criteria.