My mom secretly enrolled me in a school. Now I am enrolled in TWO SCHOOLS!!

<p>i ENROLLED in the school of my choice. I just got a letter from School B saying thank you for sending in the deposit. I asked her and she said she enrolled me there anyway. Now i am enrolled in two different schools.</p>

<p>You’re toast dude, you might end up in no school. Terrible communications I’m sorry</p>

<p>withdraw one enrollment next week ASAP and say it is because you got off a WAITLIST. It is the only acceptable reason, and you dont want to be rescinded from both schools. Check the College Admissions forum for some active waitlists.</p>

<p>If your mom won’t fund your education at any school other than the one that she enrolled you in, and if you’re dependent on her financial support, you have got to withdraw your other acceptance and go to where she’ll send you. You don’t need to give the school a reason for withdrawing your acceptance, but you need to do withdraw ASAP because if the schools find out you double enrolled, you’ll lose both acceptances.</p>

<p>She’ll pay for it, but she just enrolled me there because she wanted me there.</p>

<p>I can’t believe your mom would enroll you somewhere without telling you. That’s disgusting.</p>

<p>Withdraw from one ASAP.</p>

<p>Send an email today to the school that you will not be attending and withdraw the enrollment. Keep the email as hardcopy proof of notification. Follow up on Monday with a phone call.</p>

<p>Its that serious? I hope this doesn’t prevent me from going to college</p>

<p>I think that the only point in a deposit is to hold your place. I sent in two deposits (long story) and then emailed the school that I wouldn’t attend telling them that I’m going to matriculate somewhere else.</p>

<p>That’s ridiculous. Withdraw before it’s too late.</p>

<p>Ouch…If both schools find out will they rescind your admission? If so, your mom really screwed up.</p>

<p>I think this is a prank post. While mom can choose to pay for school A and not B, I have never seen a letter of admission that didn’t require the student to sign and return (or to do online using their password-protected account). So is the OP saying that mom forged his signature? Or stole his online identity?</p>

<p>@ mikemac: Easy, just know all the passwords . . .</p>

<p>LOL your mom is sneaky and i love it. Who does that without getting consent HAHA</p>

<p>Lie to the admissions and say you got in via waitlist. </p>

<p>Or say that something incredibly major came up in your family that forces you to forgo attending said school.</p>

<p>Or just tell them that your mom enrolled you without your consent. She has no legal right to do so, and they could be held liable for accepting any forged documents.</p>

<p>So my mom could get into serious trouble for this? I am angry about this… But I dont want to get her in serious trouble</p>

<p>Did you email them as suggested in my earlier post? If not, email now and withdraw your enrollment. In the email–say that you have decided to matriculate at another college due to financial and personal reasons. Leave it at that. </p>

<p>Follow up with a phone call to admissions on Monday either by your Mom (if you’re under 18 years of age) or you.
Print the email to verify the date sent. If possible, set the email to “receive email notification when read” and also print it.</p>

<p>Look, the letter was addressed to you.</p>

<p>They wanted you to respond.</p>

<p>She purported to be you, which is identify theft, and she mailed it so it’s mail fraud.</p>

<p>Just call them up and make sure they’re clear you don’t want to attend.</p>

<p>She said she did it online. I dont think I can do anything if she paid online. I’d have to call them. An email probably wouldnt do much. And I dont want to go around telling my schools this, because i may be able to sneak out of this by simply sending in a withdrawal form.</p>