<p>Any "top" schools with EA?</p>
<p>Chicago
UIUC (??)
U of Michigan (well, Rolling)
MIT
Caltech</p>
<p>Stanford (SCEA)
Yale (SCEA)</p>
<p>Any "top" schools with EA?</p>
<p>Chicago
UIUC (??)
U of Michigan (well, Rolling)
MIT
Caltech</p>
<p>Stanford (SCEA)
Yale (SCEA)</p>
<p>U of Texas, Austin(rolling)
Wellesley(EA) - if you are female</p>
<p>quote from another forum, "Wellesley doesn't have EA; it has EE which is due on Jan 1 and which tells an applicant of the likelihood of her admission. It has binding Fall ED as well."</p>
<p>Georgetown</p>
<p>EA schools for my son include:</p>
<p>Dickinson
Loyola of Maryland
Elon
Salisbury</p>
<p>Not necessary "good" by CC standards, but for our purposes they span reach, match, safety.</p>
<p>Notre Dame</p>
<p>UIUC does have EA</p>
<p>Boston College</p>
<p>Colorado College, Bard</p>
<p>
[quote]
quote from another forum, "Wellesley doesn't have EA; it has EE which is due on Jan 1 and which tells an applicant of the likelihood of her admission.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>It works exactly as EA. The term EE is very confusing to most people.</p>
<p>From Wellesley website.
[quote]
At the end of February‚ students who
apply under the EE decision plan receive a letter
which lists their chances for admission as “likely‚”
“possible‚” or “unlikely.”
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Translating the above terms:
Likely = accepted EA
Possible = deferred EA
Unlikely = rejected EA</p>