Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UChicago has been strangely quiet.
Since it's a comparatively easier ED admit, a lot of students don't have the option to go elsewhere, even where waitlists have moved in their favor.
Students who were admitted ED wouldn't be on any waitlists.
Yep. Most of Chicago's matriculants are locked into their spots.
100% true. My Chicago kid sees that as a positive, though. He has friends losing potential roommates and feeling ongoing uncertainty. He's happy to be locked in and assembled a friend group that's locked in as well.
Sounds like jail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UChicago has been strangely quiet.
Since it's a comparatively easier ED admit, a lot of students don't have the option to go elsewhere, even where waitlists have moved in their favor.
Students who were admitted ED wouldn't be on any waitlists.
Yep. Most of Chicago's matriculants are locked into their spots.
100% true. My Chicago kid sees that as a positive, though. He has friends losing potential roommates and feeling ongoing uncertainty. He's happy to be locked in and assembled a friend group that's locked in as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UChicago has been strangely quiet.
Since it's a comparatively easier ED admit, a lot of students don't have the option to go elsewhere, even where waitlists have moved in their favor.
Students who were admitted ED wouldn't be on any waitlists.
Yep. Most of Chicago's matriculants are locked into their spots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UChicago has been strangely quiet.
Since it's a comparatively easier ED admit, a lot of students don't have the option to go elsewhere, even where waitlists have moved in their favor.
Students who were admitted ED wouldn't be on any waitlists.
Yep. Most of Chicago's matriculants are locked into their spots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UChicago has been strangely quiet.
Since it's a comparatively easier ED admit, a lot of students don't have the option to go elsewhere, even where waitlists have moved in their favor.
Students who were admitted ED wouldn't be on any waitlists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UChicago has been strangely quiet.
Since it's a comparatively easier ED admit, a lot of students don't have the option to go elsewhere, even where waitlists have moved in their favor.
Anonymous wrote:UChicago has been strangely quiet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Got into Penn today! YES!
Congrats!
Thanks - DC is pushing back some, was really excited about going to a LAC (WASP), but I feel like..it's PENN
Such a different experience for 4 years. Curious what major? I would want my kid to go to Penn, but I think it could be a disaster for a kid that really wanted that small, intellectual LAC feel.
Humanities major - possibly history, maybe english. Wanted Ivy (Yale) from the get-go, applied to several other Ivies as well, so I feel like it's not a LAC-or-bust situation, but rather that DC got excited about the LAC when it was clearly the best option. But now it may not be the best option....
Williams or Amherst vs Penn?
What is the goal? Law school or consulting? What is your kids personality? Do they want urban? I truthfully would go with Williams or Amherst and I was a humanities major who went to law school at a T10.
Anonymous wrote:Cornell sent "interest check" emails to the students they intended to take off the waitlist. It's very important to answer those emails quickly!
Vanderbilt, Northwestern and Brown do this too.
Anonymous wrote:Neither. But the fear of International Student’s parents are obvious. Those that had offers from a t20 in the US and McGill, Oxford, Cambridge, St Andrews, UCL, LSE, Bocconi, ETH, Amsterdam, Paris and Science Po are selecting these schools instead for fear of the future.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with a relative in an enrollment management position at a t20 school, I can tell you this year has been the biggest misfire from admissions offices in a long time due to two things: 1)International student issues 2)one of the largest years ever for number of applications.
Yields are down everywhere and 9/10 colleges are digging deep in their waitlists like never before.
Harvard? Stanford?
She told me these are the most often heard university names of Internationals students that also have acceptances to top US Institutions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with a relative in an enrollment management position at a t20 school, I can tell you this year has been the biggest misfire from admissions offices in a long time due to two things: 1)International student issues 2)one of the largest years ever for number of applications.
Yields are down everywhere and 9/10 colleges are digging deep in their waitlists like never before.
Been watching this unfold. Brown and Northwestern admitted 100 fewer than the year before. So much uncertainty.
Sigh, this is why schools have huge waitlists. My high stats, full pay kid is still sitting on a few, every day deeper into plans for the school where he will attend - has a dorm assignment, looking at class options, etc. - which makes mentally switching that much more difficult than it was in March or even May.