early action non-single choice

i know u chicago has early action non-single choich (u can apply to more than one early and not be bound), any others??

<p>Here's a list of all EA</a> schools.</p>

<p>Of these, only Harvard, Stanford, and Yale are single-choice.</p>

<p>Thanks for the post. Why do some schools have N/A rather than a % under acceptance rate?</p>

<p>Northeastmom: Maybe USNews just didn't have the data broken out for those schools...although if you buy the premium edition of their online college information it does indeed break it out for most of the schools on the list.</p>

<p>One warning about EA: EA does not ALWAYS give the same advantage as ED typically does. In fact, at some schools the acceptance rate is actually significantly lower during the EA round than the RD round. So, if you didn't see the rate on the table, ask admissions for it.</p>

<p>Thank you Carolyn. I do note for one school that we visited, they specifically stated that you will not have any advantage applying ea over rd.</p>

<p>can somebody clarify EXACTLY what EA is? I know it's early admissions (diff. from ED, which is single choice and binding), but what else is different?</p>

<p>You apply early, usually by November 1. You get a decision (admitted, rejected, or deferred) usually by December 15. With the exception of HYS, you can apply to as many EA and RD schools as you want; EA is not binding. Depending on the EA school, you may also be allowed to apply ED somewhere, but you must attend your ED school if admitted.</p>

<p>EA = you can apply to as many EA/RD/rolling schools you want.
SCEA = you can only apply to one school early.</p>