<p>if you apply ED to Penn are you allowed to apply to other schools via early action?</p>
<p>no, you cannot</p>
<p>Yes, you can. As long as the other school is not restrictive.</p>
<p>I know the Yale, Stanford, Georgetown, and BC are all restive so you cannot apply to Penn and one of these schools.</p>
<p>I know that MIT and CalTech are not restrive EA so you can apply to Penn and one of these schools.</p>
<p>You can also apply to Penn and rolling admissions schools.</p>
<p>Millhouse is correct.</p>
<p>I have a friend who applied ED to Columbia and got in. He also applied EA somewhere (idk where) but upon being accepted to Columbia, he could not consider the EA school. Basically, it’s good to apply EA too, so that if you don’t get in ED to Penn, you have an early shot at an EA school too.</p>
<p>[Penn</a> Admissions: Applying Early Decision](<a href=“http://www.admissionsug.upenn.edu/applying/early.php]Penn”>http://www.admissionsug.upenn.edu/applying/early.php)</p>
<p>tons of people apply ED and EA.</p>
<p>McAwesome is wrong. He, for some odd reason, thinks that ED and EA are the same thing… which they are not.</p>
<p>Yeah the restrictive type is called Single Choice Early Action (SCEA).</p>
<p>yes, ED and EA is fine…Millhouse IS correct</p>
<p>however, if you’re applying to Penn ED and think you have a good shot, why waste the time and money on other EA apps? Even if you’re denied admission Penn ED, you will most likely get the same result RD at any school you would have applied to EA.</p>
<p>But, to answer your question, yes. You can apply EA elsewhere while applying ED to Penn</p>
<p>^ you might want to do it so it’s not such a long wait until april && because scholarship consideration for some schools is only for EA/early apps. Also, you should throw in your rolling apps…</p>