Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in Virginia and had our anxious child apply to VCU due to their rolling admissions. Worth it just to circumvent the “I am not getting in anywhere” verbal loop.
This. I encouraged applying early to increase confidence in my anxious child. To answer a previous poster, yes it is a school they would be happy to attend. It’s not currently the #1 school on their list yet it checks off most of what they want from a school.
Took 10 days to hear from Pitt.
Congrats PP, when did you apply to Pitt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in Virginia and had our anxious child apply to VCU due to their rolling admissions. Worth it just to circumvent the “I am not getting in anywhere” verbal loop.
This. I encouraged applying early to increase confidence in my anxious child. To answer a previous poster, yes it is a school they would be happy to attend. It’s not currently the #1 school on their list yet it checks off most of what they want from a school.
Took 10 days to hear from Pitt.
Anonymous wrote:Recruited athlete. Committed to a SLAC
Anonymous wrote:I don't get why anyone applies early to these schools that they already know they'll be admitted to. If you don't get into the schools you want, these schools will still be there a few months from now when you realize you need to find somewhere to go. Getting admitted is just a matter of doing the paperwork. Why are kids afraid they won't get in anywhere when there are literally hundreds of schools that will take just about anybody?
Anonymous wrote:My DC applied to a bunch of SLACs. Not one connected merit aid to the order in which they received applications. This goes against everything we know about why and how private schools use merit aid to get you to enroll. https://www.ccbcmd.edu/Programs-and-Courses/Schools-and-Academic-Departments/School-of-Business-Technology-and-Law/Transportation-Technology/Aviation-Technology/Flight-Training.aspx
Anonymous wrote:We live in Virginia and had our anxious child apply to VCU due to their rolling admissions. Worth it just to circumvent the “I am not getting in anywhere” verbal loop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who haven't been through the process, your student doesn't need to wait until the transcripts are available to submit their application. You can get everything done on the student-side as soon as the applications open. As mentioned above - some schools require the official transcript before the application is considered "final" - others will review with self-reported grades and verify later.
if they don’t have the grades/transcript, then on what grounds would the school be accepting your kid or not?
The kids self-report their grades first, then the transcripts arrive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who haven't been through the process, your student doesn't need to wait until the transcripts are available to submit their application. You can get everything done on the student-side as soon as the applications open. As mentioned above - some schools require the official transcript before the application is considered "final" - others will review with self-reported grades and verify later.
if they don’t have the grades/transcript, then on what grounds would the school be accepting your kid or not?
Anonymous wrote:For those who haven't been through the process, your student doesn't need to wait until the transcripts are available to submit their application. You can get everything done on the student-side as soon as the applications open. As mentioned above - some schools require the official transcript before the application is considered "final" - others will review with self-reported grades and verify later.