Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell is with the Michigan haters on this forum? It's so random and weird.
Every school yield protects, by the way.
Also, kids don't make decisions solely based on the selectivity of the schools they get into.
Not every school yield protects. Michigan does it. UVA doesn't.
That's ludicrous - what data do you have to support this? Your one or two anecdotes from personal experience don't count as hard science
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell is with the Michigan haters on this forum? It's so random and weird.
Every school yield protects, by the way.
Also, kids don't make decisions solely based on the selectivity of the schools they get into.
Not every school yield protects. Michigan does it. UVA doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:Reasons for Safety Rejections:
#1. Gender Balancing
#2. Intended Major Balancing
#3. High School Quota Already Met.
Anonymous wrote:What the hell is with the Michigan haters on this forum? It's so random and weird.
Every school yield protects, by the way.
Also, kids don't make decisions solely based on the selectivity of the schools they get into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Got into USC, WashU, Pratt, Tulane, Clemson, not VA Tech so who really knows
were you applying for engineering? Had you finished calculus in high school when you applied?
Anonymous wrote:Got into USC, WashU, Pratt, Tulane, Clemson, not VA Tech so who really knows
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA, schools that yield protect SHOULD NOT BE considered safeties BY DEFINITION!!!
Schools with <50% acceptance rates are NOT safeties.
People rejected from "safeties" did not actually have safeties.
This question is OT, but how in the world are we supposed to find out if a school yield protects? This obviously isn't something that they put forward on their websites!
Look over last year's discussions (e.g. on college confidential) to see whether high-stats applicants are sometimes among the rejected or among those deferred in the early round.
This does not typically happen at schools with higher acceptance rates (say, >70%). Yield protection seems to be more of an issue in the middle ranges (say, 40-55%).
Example of a school that yield protects: Santa Clara U. Overall acceptance rate approaches 50%. High-stats applicants are routinely rejected if they don't show demonstrated interest and/or a good fit with jesuit educational ideals. Another important note: the overall acceptance rate at a university may not be indicative of the acceptance rate to a particular program or major. Engineering (CS specifically!) and business are often more competitive than the school's overall stats suggest. Some schools publish separate stats, but most do not.
Less-selective state colleges and lower-ranked privates tend to admit more on stats and less holistically (i.e. less on subjective factors) and accordingly make for more reliable safeties. Look to the back quarter of the top 100 national universities or just beyond the top 50 LACs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happend to both me and dh. Met at Stanford in 87. Neither of us got into our safeties. Mine was Franklin & Marshall and his was Haverford.
Stanford wasn't nearly so selective back then, though was it? Not sure it would have been considered more of a reach than Haverford at the time. Seems like Franklin & Marshall has always yield protected--I've heard similar stories about it through the years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happend to both me and dh. Met at Stanford in 87. Neither of us got into our safeties. Mine was Franklin & Marshall and his was Haverford.
Stanford wasn't nearly so selective back then, though was it? Not sure it would have been considered more of a reach than Haverford at the time. Seems like Franklin & Marshall has always yield protected--I've heard similar stories about it through the years.
Anonymous wrote:Happend to both me and dh. Met at Stanford in 87. Neither of us got into our safeties. Mine was Franklin & Marshall and his was Haverford.