<p>Ok, i won't actually do this... but i'm just curious. How do schools know if you're applying ED to multiple places?</p>
<p>don't worry, the colleges talk and they will automatically reject you, so don't even try</p>
<p>Especially if you get accepted to 2 binding places...BAD IDEA!</p>
<p>what about multiple EAs?</p>
<p>multiple eas are fine. UNLESS you apply to a single choice ea (harvard, stanford, yale for example). Most ED schools allow you to apply to multiple EA schools at the same time, but some don't.</p>
<p>Multiple ED's are possible in certain circumstances. If you get deferred or rejected from your ED college, you can apply ED II to another.</p>
<p>I'm wondering about this as well...... how do they actually find out if you applied ED to a few schools?</p>
<p>The colleges share lists of admitted students. Most GCs are ethical and won't allow students to apply to multiple single choice EDs because of the colleges find out, they'll punish the GC and the h.s. by deliberately rejecting qualified students.</p>
<p>There are tons of threads on this subject. Check CC's archives.</p>
<p>Some schools do share ED lists (the Ivy league schools have a joint statement concerning ED and they do honor each other's commitments).</p>
<p>I doubt if your GC would want his/her integrity shot to hell, and his/her name being muddd in the eyes of admissions officers over you circumventing the process and your classmates would surely find you memorable after your school is possibly blacklisted from a college because of their college application processess.</p>
<p>If you're going to do that, don't even bother filling out the apps. It'd be a waste of time to do all that work and then get rejected everywhere you apply.</p>
<p>
Some schools do share ED lists
</p>
<p>Yup ! Only ** some ** do.</p>
<p>The control point is your guidance counsellor. You can't apply ED without the cooperation and knowledge of your GC, who would either be very foolish or a complete space cadet to let you violate your ED agreement by applying ED to a 2nd school.</p>
<p>wait i have a question:
ca i apply to ed princeton, then Ea to like 7 other schools? or should i forget the ed and jus apply rd princeton?</p>
<p>Skywalk, you'd have to read the official ED policy on the Princeton website, but if I remember right their's prevents you from filing other early apps. But if Princeton is a clear first choice, you should be forgetting the EAs and applying ED to Princeton, the advantage is huge.</p>
<p>Princeton states the following:</p>
<p>Early Decision</p>
<p>If you have determined that Princeton is first among your college choices, you may submit your application by November 1 and receive a decision from us by mid-December. Applying Early Decision constitutes a commitment to attend Princeton if you are offered admission.</p>
<p>Early Decision application outcomes include: admission to Princeton; deferral of the final decision until after another review in the Regular Decision process; and refusal of admission.</p>
<p>Early Decision applicants must have taken the SAT I or the new SAT Reasoning Test and SAT II tests no later than the November 5, 2005 test date.</p>
<p>Early Decision applicants may not apply under Early Decision or Early Action plans at any other college or university (but may submit Regular Decision applications elsewhere).</p>
<p>Early Decision applicants who apply for financial aid and are offered admission in December will be notified of any aid awards at the same time. </p>
<p>you cannot apply ed at princeton and ea/ed at other programs</p>
<p>how can I find out which colleges accept ed, ea, or both? here's my list:</p>
<p>UC Irvine
UCSB
UCLA
UC berkeley
UC San Diego
Michgian university ann arbor
Georgetown(EA)
Columbia
John Hopkins
Rice
Stanford
northwestern?
brown
Princeton(ED)
U of Chicago-prolly not
Cornell
Harvard(EA)
Carnegie Mellon
Duke
Dartmouth</p>
<p>which schools accpet ea, which accept ed, and which accept both or none?</p>
<p>You're obviously going to have to go to the school websites. And you are also going to have to realize that that is probably too many schools. Anyway, off the top of my head</p>
<p>UCs: nothing
UMich: Rolling
Georgetown: EA
Columbia: ED
John Hopkins: ED
Rice: ED and ID
Stanford: SCEA
Northwestern: ED
Brown: not sure
Princeton: ED
UChicago: EA
Cornell: ED
Harvard: SCEA
Carnegie Mellon: not sure
Duke: ED
Dartmouth: ED</p>
<p>Looks like you've found yourself a whole 2-4 open EA schools. Note that Stanford and Harvard are single choice Early Action, meaning you couldn't EA or ED at any other schools. I also know that if you do ED at Dartmouth, you can still do EA at other schools as long as their policies permit it. Remember in these combinations that you need to abide by the policies of all schools involved.</p>
<p>um daywalker, i think those are way too many schools to apply to, not to mention to apply ED or EA. i would narrow those down to one school you really want to apply and then apply ED or EA to that school.</p>
<p>if a school is scea, does that mean that i am unable to apply ea to any other school?</p>
<p>IF a school is SCEA (Single choice early action) you can not apply ED EA or ID (example: rice) to any other program that has a decision date before the SCEA decision date. However you can apply rolling admission to something like your state U. </p>
<p>Also remember that you cannot apply EA at georgetown and EA at another school.</p>
<p>Make sure you check the policies at the schools you are interested in attending to make sure that you don't violate the policies and jepordize having an admission rescinded.</p>
<p>Yes. 10 char</p>