Anonymous wrote:The type of harm discussed in these posts is speculative. And you can always say you are analyzing the financial situation. My kid worked hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid graduated from TJ a few years ago. There was a kid in his class who got into a T20 ED. Didn’t withdraw other apps and then got into an Ivy. Long story short, the Ivy rescinded and the ED school rescinded and the kid had to take a gap year.
Why did they not ED to the ivy if that was the preferred school?
Anonymous wrote:The type of harm discussed in these posts is speculative. And you can always say you are analyzing the financial situation. My kid worked hard.
Anonymous wrote:+1Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The high school college guidance counselor may not release final transcripts to any school other than the ED where the kid was accepted.
It isn't just about the applicant. In this case the high school and the college guidance counselor are also on the hook.
How selfish.
Really? How could it be legal for a public high school to withhold transcripts?
Anonymous wrote:https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/18/your-money/paying-for-college/early-decision-binding-nyu.html
You can back out if you haven’t accepted the ED offer. Accepted is the key word.
It also says that if you applied for financial aid but didn’t get what you need to attend, then you can withdraw.
Anyone thinking about applying ED needs to read this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/18/your-money/paying-for-college/early-decision-binding-nyu.amp.html
This says ED is not a legal contract and the NYT forced NYU to retract a blog post saying it was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not OP, but I wish we could also withdraw. Mostly bc we got zero merit from the school my DD was accepted to ED. And plenty of merit aid from the other schools she was accepted to -- but I realize that is the risk we took, but still sucks. We thought there would be a little merit at least and now we will need to take out a loan.
The one loophole is financial. You are not forced to take out loans. If you cannot afford this school without loans but something that you can afford without loans has come through, you can turn down the ED. Before I did that, though, I would call the ED financial aid office and see if they can offer you something.
I thought that was only of the cost was way off the NPC.
Anonymous wrote:How do you even do it? Dc had ED app due, evaluated, accepted and a commitment was required before RD was even due at schools. How do you get guidance to cooperate with these schemes?
Anonymous wrote:How do you even do it? Dc had ED app due, evaluated, accepted and a commitment was required before RD was even due at schools. How do you get guidance to cooperate with these schemes?
Anonymous wrote:I realize all the posters here have a high moral code and would not play this ED game. In 5 pages of posts, there has only been 1 mention of a student having his acceptance rescinded and that was with an ivy/T 20 school. Looking for real life instances with ED acceptances to regular schools like Wake Forest or Iowa or Juniata. I am not convinced public schools with overworked guidance counselors have the capability or interest to deal with this.
-no skin in this game. Both of my DS were deferred in the ED round and ultimately rejected.
Anonymous wrote:I realize all the posters here have a high moral code and would not play this ED game. In 5 pages of posts, there has only been 1 mention of a student having his acceptance rescinded and that was with an ivy/T 20 school. Looking for real life instances with ED acceptances to regular schools like Wake Forest or Iowa or Juniata. I am not convinced public schools with overworked guidance counselors have the capability or interest to deal with this.
-no skin in this game. Both of my DS were deferred in the ED round and ultimately rejected.