Letter of Appeal

<p>If you're rejected by a college can you send them a letter of appeal? If so, what would you have to write to them?</p>

<p>No. Admissions decisions are final. Only those placed on the waitlist still have a chance of admission for the fall – and even their chances are pretty slim. But if you still have your heart set on a school that did not admit you, you can apply next year as a transfer student after completing freshman year at your favorite college from among those that did accept you, or attending a local community college. You could also choose to take a gap year, do something substantial (work full-time, undertake an in-depth project, take a post-grad high school year at a private school, etc.) and then reapply to your top choice as a freshman next year.</p>

<p>Actually, that’s not true. It depends if the university you got denied from accept appeal letters. The reversed decisions are slim, but it does happen. If you can provide documentation of an extenuating circumstance of why your grades dropped, why they should accept you, and what you have to offer, you might have a good chance.</p>

<p>Actually, that’s not true. You have to have something amazing for them to pick you up after they rejected you. Getting accepted through appeal is nearly impossible.</p>