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Students who are admitted under Early Action are not obligated to accept the institution’s offer of admission or to submit a deposit prior to May 1. Under non-restrictive Early Action, a student may apply to other colleges.</p>. <p>Restrictive Application Plans: These are plans that allow institutions to limit students from applying to other ...
Yale Restrictive Early Action means that you are only allowed to apply Early Action to ONLY Yale, and that’s it. You can’t apply to Harvard EA, or I believe your application will be cancelled. </p>. <p>And the quote from the website means you can apply regular decision for any other school, and if you get in Yale, you can reply by May 1st ...
Under the early application process, there are different variations such as Restrictive Early Action (REA) and Early Action (EA). REA typically restricts applicants from applying to other private schools early, but it may still allow applying to public schools or universities with non-binding early programs.
SC stands for Single-Choice, meaning you can’t apply to any other private college early (whether EA or ED). For example, if you apply to Harvard early (under SCEA), you can’t apply to MIT or Caltech early, even though MIT and Caltech have completely unrestricted EA and they allow their applicants to apply to any other schools. A slightly ...
<p>I am planning to apply to Yale for early action and only Yale for EA because of its restrictive policy. However, my college counselor says that I can apply for other school's EA programs and Yale EA simultaneously, just as long as the others schools don't hold a restrictive policy.</p> <p>I'm a little wary of his advice. Am I allowed to apply to Yale EA and, for example, MIT EA?</p> <p ...
The language on ND’s website says “A student applying Restrictive Early Action to Notre Dame may not apply to any college or university (private or public) in their binding Early Decision program.” Trying to make sure I understand this policy. I get that students who apply to ND REA 1) can apply to other schools EA, and 2) cannot apply to other schools ED1. My question is about ED2. If a ...
At Princeton, it’s called SCEA, Single Choice Early Action. In a nutshell, the admit % is high for SCEA because of higher quality applicants among the SCEA pool. In other words, whether the SCEA application helps or not really depends on the level of your application quality.
Restricted Early Action is essentially the same thing as Early Decision. <p>Not really, in that you are not bound to go if you are accepted. You have the same ability to decide by May 1, as with other EA plans, depending on other admissions and FA packages. You may apply Regular Decision anywhere.
boston-college. Tromboneplayer91 October 18, 2008, 4:44pm 1. <p>Last weekend, I submitted my BC supplement and payment saying that I would apply Early Action. I did not realize that this was restricted, meaning if you apply to BC early, you can’t apply Early Decision anywhere else. I really want to apply Early Decision to Amherst though.
vdogboss May 2, 2012, 5:39pm 1. <p>SCEA is single choice early action. EA is early action. REA is restrictive early action. ED is early decision.</p>. <p>But, I don’t know what they mean. Can someone please clarify?</p>. ckcollege May 2, 2012, 5:48pm 2. <p>Basically, ED is binding–if you get into a school and applied ED, you must withdraw ...