<p>I got deferred ED. Can you be deferred again RD? Can Cornell tell you to go to another school for one year, get a 3.0 GPA or higher, and automatically get in sophomore year? This option would be better than getting rejected and then transferring in later. But the best would be getting accepted RD obviously!</p>
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Can you be deferred again RD?
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<p>It is then called "Waitlist".</p>
<p>oh yeah duh! I have heard of that before!</p>
<p>does cornell discriminate between students who were deferred and those simply applying RD? who has the edge, if any? how do you send in supplemental materials to help your application?</p>
<p>Hopefully that won't happen to you.</p>
<p>i would think deferred students have an edge because they have displayed an interest in cornell that is much higher than RD applicants, and they are most likely to attend if accepted thus increasing cornell's yield.</p>
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likely to attend if accepted
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<p>I hear you but I don't know that I agree.......no commitment from the school and with other apps out, why would anyone then feel compelled to attend? I think if one is accepted SCEA perhaps but one you get rolled into regular all bet s are off.</p>
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Can Cornell tell you to go to another school for one year, get a 3.0 GPA or higher, and automatically get in sophomore year
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That is called a guaranteed transfer. I believe the GPA is usually a 3.3, however.</p>
<p>oy... hurt by upenn, don't want to be hurt by cornell rd... can't help but feel i made a mistake :(... anyway, to answer the original q... i think deferred apps are preferred, tho not with penn with acceptance at 15% vs. 19% for overall rd</p>
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No gym for home, work out floor with 30, but is it for 20 like 30 lb when you no
lift it to be for men, for 30 lbs instead? or half is 10 for 20 pounds?</p>