Cornell Sends Rejected Students ‘Congrats’ E-mails

<p>"A technological glitch as well as human error caused the Office of Financial Aid to mistakenly send congratulatory e-mails earlier this month to 25 prospective students who had already been rejected by the Office of Admissions, a University official said yesterday."</p>

<p>C.U</a>. Financial Aid Office Sends Rejected Students ?Congrats??E-mails | The Cornell Daily Sun</p>

<p>this year is really fail for colleges sending out emails…</p>

<p>I think UCSD failed the most… I can’t imagine getting an acceptance email and then, 2 hours later, getting rejected.</p>

<p>Apparently Cornell did the same thing a few years ago, but on a much larger scale. I think they basically did what UCSD that time.</p>

<p>The FA office is always causing problems ;)</p>

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<p>They did…but it affected 550 applicants vs. the 29,000 UCSD applicants. I can’t imagine that happening to me…that had to be awful for the students.</p>

<p>Why is this now a featured discussion? Surely there are topics more important than this one.</p>

<p>Chandler: What you said above is not true: "I think UCSD failed the most… I can’t imagine getting an acceptance email and then, 2 hours later, getting rejected. "</p>

<p>The facts: On March 14, UCSD correctly released results (admits, rejects) for over 47,000 applicants. Then on March 28 or so, the school wanted to send a reminder of Admit Day on April 4 to all 16000 ADMITTED. Instead it sent the reminder to all APPLICANTS, a case of using the wrong database. Two hours later, an email of apology was sent to ALL those who were wrongly addressed.</p>

<p>All those who checked their “MyApplication” on UCSD on March 28 still saw their original Admit/Reject Status. No one but the most naive would have believed this was anything but a mistake.</p>

<p>Unfortunate incident to be sure. But not one where the wrong status was communicated for the first time to 47,000 applicants.</p>

<p>lol i read this in the cornell paper…</p>

<p>Weird, the sources I read explicitly stated that decision emails were sent out, and that all applicants got the accepted decision.</p>

<p>There was a TWO-WEEK gap between the decision announcements which were all made and posted correctly (March 14) and the reminder emails (on March 28 or so ) for Admit day sent to all. The Cornell paper has it wrong – once again procing the axiom don’t believe everything you read.</p>

<p>Throughout the whole episode, the acceptances and rejections remained available to all even those who got the reminder email by error. Unfortunate but such is life when you access the wrong database. </p>

<p>The key point is NO, UCSD DID NOT ADMIT EVERYONE at any point.</p>

<p>In any case, I hope none of this happens this year. It would feel terrible to be accepted first only to have that joy crushed shortly after.</p>