<p>"According to Patricia Wei, associate director of undergraduate admissions at Yale, When students sign the EA form, they are indicating that they are not applying to any other schools early programs. We expect our applicants to be ethical and abide by this contract. Yale does not share EA lists with other colleges, but should the Yale Admissions Office find out that a Yale EA candidate has also applied to other Early Action or Early Decision programs, we may rescind our offer of admission and we may contact the other colleges to which the student has applied EA or ED. It will be up to the other colleges what actions they will take.</p>
<p>Thus, if you are applying to college via a single-choice early option, and you attempt to also apply elsewhere before its permissible, then your integrity is certainly at stake and possibly a lot more."</p>
<p>Considering the yale EA program is called “Single-Choice Early Action”, I am not surprised. I understand I made a mistake. I was simply seeking advice for my future by creating this thread. But thanks.</p>
<p>Google name of college common data set and scroll down to section c. That tells you the admitted score range, how many students they reject, where they fell in terms of class rank, etc.</p>
<p>To compare admission rates side by side at one website, use College Navigator [College</a> Navigator - National Center for Education Statistics](<a href=“http://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/]College”>College Navigator - National Center for Education Statistics)
Find the schools of interest and save them as favorites, then use the favorites tab to compare them all, see the admissions section.
The Common Data Set is excellent for getting tons of additional details about a school and for admissions in particular you can see how different factors are weighed, sometimes a breakdown of GPAs, as well as test scores, etc. LOTS of useful info!</p>