Anonymous wrote:In our non DMV private school, ED has advantages if you are applying to non T-5 but among the T-20. You still have to have very competitive stats. The simple advantage is in the RD round you are not being compared to the Harvard, MIT, and Stanford deferred kids in your school who have stronger stats than you and are now applying to 22 schools in RD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being low income, it was a no brainer to apply EDI. The NPC was dead on. Now child can worry about picking his engineering classes at Northeastern instead of hoping he gets in somewhere. He also gets to take two pre-college classes that along with AP's is already almost done with one year of classes. He is in mountains skiing now enjoying his solstice break.
Wondering how a low income kid affords to ski all winter break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early Decision should be illegal, frankly. It's inequitable, and for families who can afford to participate, deeply stressful.
+1
It's affirmative action for the rich.
Nonsense. Anyone can ED. There's an out if you can't make the numbers work financially. Besides, not everything in life has to be "equitable," nor should everything you don't like or that you find unfair be "illegal."
Fairly confident if a FP kid with siblings @ our private backed out of an ED, then the younger ones may not get much of a lift when their time came around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dont buy into the "so glad we didn't ruin senior year" thing about ED.
ED has to be done by nov 1 and RD by mostly Jan 1. Even if you do ED, you have to have your list ready and some of the supplementals at least started. That's conventional advice.
So this is done for all kids by early January. The decision making time if you do RD is exciting. the power shifts to the applicant. They colleges woo you for a change! The weekends are really fun, you get to think about what you really want, compare in a way you can't on a tour, etc etc.
IOW, all kids are done w the hard stuff by either Nov 1 or January 1. I don't think the trade off is worth it.
So don't "buy it" for yourself or your kid. But don't discount what we're saying for us when ED works for our kid: DS had his one app, top choice by far, ED1 acceptance on Dec 5. (If it was a rejection he would have moved to a very safe ED2 and super super safe RD). No pressure for midterms or second semester grades or decisions or anxious waiting. All good here.
Anonymous wrote:First DC sent ED too low and regretted it. This year, second DC sent ED too high and didn't get in. Regretting that and now runs the risk of getting wiped out in RD. What kind of madness is this that after putting in years of solid work etc etc, kids are buying single lotteries to get into college?
Anonymous wrote:ED is also a strategy employed by people who can pay full freight who have children who don’t have the stats for EA or RD. Most of the kids we know that got in ED have far less rigorous course loads and far less impressive stats than those who got in or were referred from EA. we saw this with schools like Tulane, Fairfield, Wake Forest, and Miami.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure - anyone who can afford to pay the tuition without comparing FA and merit offers. How many middle class families can afford to do that at at $80K+/yr for schools like NYU, Tulane, Northwestern, BC, Northeastern, Rice, Middlebury? Chance of admission is higher and most of these schools are taking 50% or more of the class ED. It doesn't benefit a kid to apply ED if they can't afford it, so yes it's a big hook for full pay kids.Anyone can ED.
and again low income families who get low NPC.
They ED without much pressure unlike middle class families.
You do realize that not every school out there is need blind and meets need, right?
Which is why the ED card needs to be used very wisely.
There are about 25 schools that will make it all work. If you have a Princeton or Stanford caliber kid, finances aren't going to be an issue.
They will though at say Boston College. Just using as an example.
Do the financial calculator for every school.
ED is very advantageous for the wealthy and those needing significant aid from the very best schools. I mean, Princeton is free for any family earning less than $100,000. And significant grants upwards of $300,000. There are other schools like that.
But they are all elite schools with enormous endowments.
ED is a game that will vary according to every family's circumstances
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Early Decision should be illegal, frankly. It's inequitable, and for families who can afford to participate, deeply stressful.
+1
It's affirmative action for the rich.
Nonsense. Anyone can ED. There's an out if you can't make the numbers work financially. Besides, not everything in life has to be "equitable," nor should everything you don't like or that you find unfair be "illegal."
Yep. Affirmative action for the rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure - anyone who can afford to pay the tuition without comparing FA and merit offers. How many middle class families can afford to do that at at $80K+/yr for schools like NYU, Tulane, Northwestern, BC, Northeastern, Rice, Middlebury? Chance of admission is higher and most of these schools are taking 50% or more of the class ED. It doesn't benefit a kid to apply ED if they can't afford it, so yes it's a big hook for full pay kids.Anyone can ED.
and again low income families who get low NPC.
They ED without much pressure unlike middle class families.
You run the NPC and will know your EFC when applying. This is not going to change whether ED or RD. Schools like Northwestern and Rice are not giving you merit either. Too many competitive applicants
Anonymous wrote:And what about EA, thats another off shoot of broken admission process
Anonymous wrote:ED is one of many broken things with college admissions. Not only does it benefit the rich, it puts so much pressure on 17/18 year olds to make a huge decision with limited information.
Anonymous wrote:Early Decision should be illegal, frankly. It's inequitable, and for families who can afford to participate, deeply stressful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In our non DMV private school, ED has advantages if you are applying to non T-5 but among the T-20. You still have to have very competitive stats. The simple advantage is in the RD round you are not being compared to the Harvard, MIT, and Stanford deferred kids in your school who have stronger stats than you and are now applying to 22 schools in RD.
Confused. Did you mean "simple advantage" in the ED (not RD) round above?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure - anyone who can afford to pay the tuition without comparing FA and merit offers. How many middle class families can afford to do that at at $80K+/yr for schools like NYU, Tulane, Northwestern, BC, Northeastern, Rice, Middlebury? Chance of admission is higher and most of these schools are taking 50% or more of the class ED. It doesn't benefit a kid to apply ED if they can't afford it, so yes it's a big hook for full pay kids.Anyone can ED.
and again low income families who get low NPC.
They ED without much pressure unlike middle class families.
You do realize that not every school out there is need blind and meets need, right?