Anonymous wrote:UVA instate yield is 62%
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like UChicago has something funky going on. They don't report their early decision data at all.
+1 it’s how they maintain a low acceptance rate. By accepting 75-80% of the class through ED1, ED2, and waitlist (forced commit waitlist which is basically ED3), UChicago can accept less overall students since they have so few accepted in RD. On the completely other end of the spectrum, Duke only accepts ~40% of their class through ED which is lower than every other elite school, which means they’re not afraid of losing tons of students to HPSM in RD each year. I respect the schools that use ED less heavily like Duke and Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is hard to believe that so many of the REA schools can have such high yield rates in this modern area of applying to so many places. With the exception of the recruited athletes, all the applicants I've known who are admitted EA still apply to numerous other top schools as well.
Many students do it for the heck of it. DC’s friend got into Yale SCEA and personally committed instantly. He then completed 20 other apps to see where he could get into including Stanford, Harvard, JHU, and even MIT. He still chose Yale, cause that’s where he wanted to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kAnonymous wrote:You added other LACs but intentionally left of Amherst because it's lower than the others at 39%.
If you can get into amherst, you can get into much better lacs and much nicer ones too.
Curious, which ones are nicer than Amherst?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is hard to believe that so many of the REA schools can have such high yield rates in this modern area of applying to so many places. With the exception of the recruited athletes, all the applicants I've known who are admitted EA still apply to numerous other top schools as well.
Many students do it for the heck of it. DC’s friend got into Yale SCEA and personally committed instantly. He then completed 20 other apps to see where he could get into including Stanford, Harvard, JHU, and even MIT. He still chose Yale, cause that’s where he wanted to go.
That's not very nice because it reduces the chances of a classmate getting in.
Anonymous wrote:kAnonymous wrote:You added other LACs but intentionally left of Amherst because it's lower than the others at 39%.
If you can get into amherst, you can get into much better lacs and much nicer ones too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is hard to believe that so many of the REA schools can have such high yield rates in this modern area of applying to so many places. With the exception of the recruited athletes, all the applicants I've known who are admitted EA still apply to numerous other top schools as well.
Many students do it for the heck of it. DC’s friend got into Yale SCEA and personally committed instantly. He then completed 20 other apps to see where he could get into including Stanford, Harvard, JHU, and even MIT. He still chose Yale, cause that’s where he wanted to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is hard to believe that so many of the REA schools can have such high yield rates in this modern area of applying to so many places. With the exception of the recruited athletes, all the applicants I've known who are admitted EA still apply to numerous other top schools as well.
Many students do it for the heck of it. DC’s friend got into Yale SCEA and personally committed instantly. He then completed 20 other apps to see where he could get into including Stanford, Harvard, JHU, and even MIT. He still chose Yale, cause that’s where he wanted to go.
Anonymous wrote:It is hard to believe that so many of the REA schools can have such high yield rates in this modern area of applying to so many places. With the exception of the recruited athletes, all the applicants I've known who are admitted EA still apply to numerous other top schools as well.
kAnonymous wrote:You added other LACs but intentionally left of Amherst because it's lower than the others at 39%.
Anonymous wrote:Are these yield rates for the current year?