date of regular decisions release?

<p>how are they going to do it?
mail or online or email?</p>

<p>if online where?</p>

<p>It will be online where you check your application status. You can log into your account before the decision is supposed to be released, and it will just show you a screen saying “This page will automatically refresh when your decision becomes available” or something similar.</p>

<p>When? 10char</p>

<p>It will either be March 28th (Which is a really popular date for a many schools, such as the Ivies and other prestigious schools) or like they said, April 1st</p>

<p>Yeah Duke has done it earlier than April 1st in the past. Last year it was March 29th, so it should be around there again this year like FraNeighbor said. Duke will send an email a week before releasing decisions saying when and at what time decisions will be released.</p>

<p>The alum that interviewed our D said that he gets to call the kids he interviewed that were admitted. He doesn’t call the ones that weren’t admitted. Was anybody else told this?</p>

<p>Alumni find out who got admitted only when the admittee gets the decision in the actual mail. So the applicant will find out the decision a few days before the alum does.</p>

<p>The alumni interviewer also can find out from the student. :wink: If you wind up with good news to share, dropping your interviewer an email to let them know and thank them again is a nice thing to do.</p>

<p>@BeachMom21: I believe the alumni interviewers can view their applicants’ decisions when Duke puts the decision letters in the mail which will be a couple days after the online release to the applicants. The interviewers are asked to contact the admitted students only to offer congratulations and answer any questions.</p>

<p>BeachMom: I have been Duke alumni undergarduate interviewer for many years and, in fact, we have access to the acceptance results for those we interview; however, it normally takes about a week for our AIMS database to reflect these decisions, so you’ll normally know well before we do.</p>