Are you allowed to ED penn and EA another school

<p>From their website, there doesn’t seem to be anything stopping you…unlike princeton.</p>

<p>I ask this for my friend.</p>

<p>haha i love you mike.. what a kid</p>

<p>LOL your username cracks me up.</p>

<p>mike: isn't that what the guy calls himself who has his own show on YES? The show where there are two guys talking, both white, one has glasses.</p>

<p>As long as it isn't SCEA, like Harvard.</p>

<p>Mike:</p>

<p>You can apply ED (binding contract meaning you WILL go to their school if accepted) to as many schools as you wish.</p>

<p>Yeah there is a fat guy (Mike) and a clown (maddog). Both extremely arrogant idiots.</p>

<p>^^^^^^^^^ im pretty sure thats completely incorrect.</p>

<p>sorry you beat my post mellon boy, i mean #6 is just wrong, like rosie odonnel-tim arnold wrong.</p>

<p>Just cause they are extremly arrogant doesn't make them idiots.
So I could ED Penn, and EA a school like caltech right?</p>

<p>If you apply ED to a school, you CANNOT apply to any other schools. PERIOD.</p>

<p>
[quote]
If you apply ED to a school, you CANNOT apply to any other schools. PERIOD.

[/quote]

Just to clarify: Yes, you can do that at Penn.</p>

<p>You can ED at Penn + EA at another school as long as it's not SCEA.</p>

<p>Can you provide this link? ^^</p>

<p>Thats what I was thinking b/c on the website, it never explicitly says anything refuting that claim, like how princeton or the SCEAs do.</p>

<p>Here's what the malicious folks at collegeboard have to say about it:</p>

<p><a href="http://www.collegeboard.com/student/apply/the-application/104.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.collegeboard.com/student/apply/the-application/104.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>My Interpretation: *keep in mind I am, in no way, a trained professional
Supposed you apply to
- College A with Official Collegeboard ED Plan
- College B with Official Collegeboard EA Plan (not SCEA!)</p>

<p>And you get into College A ED and College B EA. According to the rules above, you must accept the decision to College A because that was binding. If you only got into one, and not the other (or, worse yet, neither) then there's no problem or conflict.</p>

<p>My disclaimer: Make sure you talk to both Colleges A and B to make sure its OK with BOTH of them. I'm not sure if this means you can apply to more than one EA along with one ED...</p>

<p>i applied ED to penn and EA to uchicago... got deferred from both then accepted...</p>

<p>"You can apply ED (binding contract meaning you WILL go to their school if accepted) to as many schools as you wish."</p>

<p>Your statement is a paradox. Think about your statement. If you do apply to more than one school and according to your statement it is binding (which is true) than if you get accepted to more than one school ED, which one do you go to? SEnd a few limbs to one and the rest to the other? Of course not, so the only other possiblility is that your statement is false.</p>

<p>Please reread my previous statement.</p>

<p>


</p>

<p>I only mentioned applying to more than one school in the case of early ACTION. According to the quote above, you can only apply ED to ONE school.</p>

<p>"SEnd a few limbs to one and the rest to the other?"</p>

<p>you do exactly that. :D</p>

<p>So technically, you can apply ED to Penn and EA (nonbinding) to as many schools as you wish.</p>

<p>Yea, there's nothing in the "rules" of EA/ED that prevents you from doing that. However, I would definately check with all the schools involved before attempting more than one early.</p>