Early decision II

<p>I am thinking about applying to two colleges using the early decision 2 option, but in the agreement it states that you may not apply to any other school using early decision 2. Do they actually check stuff like that, or is it just to scare people off? Has anyone had any experience with that?</p>

<p>Ehhh? There’s an Early Decision 2 Option?</p>

<p>I thought all hey for ED was to choose only 1 school for ED.</p>

<p>Heplayer92,
yeah I agree, but when my counselor said that she had a student who applied early decision 2 to two colleges, it got me interested…</p>

<p>Does anyone know if it is possible?</p>

<p>Some schools have two Early Decision dates. For example, EDI requires the application by Nov. 1 and you hear by Dec. 15. Then, EDII requires the application by Jan. 1 (usually also the RD deadline), and you hear by Feb. 15. Each requires that if you are accepted, you must attend.</p>

<p>There are two scenarios in which EDII generally comes into play.</p>

<p>1) A student applies to School A under EDI. The student gets deferred or rejected. The student then applies to School B under their EDII program.</p>

<p>2) The student has not completed his or her application in time to apply EDI, or wants the school to consider the midterm grades before making a decision. The student therefore applies to only one school, using EDII only.</p>

<p>In each round, the student can apply to only one school ED. If the student is accepted to the EDI school, he or she does not apply anywhere under EDII.</p>

<p>Does this make sense?</p>

<p>sakic - they may not check, but you’d be in a really difficult position if you were accepted at both institutions via ED.</p>

<p>they may or may not check, but it is not worth it, because if you get caught, both applications will get tossed out.
and like _me said, if you got into both, you’d be in a sticky situation.</p>

<p>yep… thanks people</p>