<p>According to research that I and a few other users conducted, there is a correlation between receiving the message “2014 award access not available” and being accepted into New York University. No concrete counterexamples to this theory have been found.</p>
<p>In my research, I have come across your financial aid status (2012 and 2013 messages rather than 2014). Sadly, the person with that same situation was rejected. However, it could be that the 2012/2013 glitch is not indicative of admission decision in the way as that the 2014 message indicates admission.</p>
<p>Like I said, I’m pretty sure there was only one case similar to yours. Unless a few identical cases can be found (with a majority of them being rejected), we won’t be sure what your glitch means. Fingers crossed, nyudreamz!</p>
<p>My application status got changed to lsp and I’m really disappointed. Someone posted earlier that once it changes that’s where you are definitely getting into. Do you guys think that the program is worth it? Or should I just consider my other colleges? I guess it also depends on how much financial aid NYU gives me, but I know that NYU is usually pretty stingy…</p>
<p>LSP is so worth it. It’s just two years of core courses and then you get to go to CAS or wherever else beaides Stern. I haven’t heard any bad things from LSP students when and they all seemed rather satisfied with the program.</p>
<p>Nobody is already rejected! Don’t think negatively.</p>
<p>This is going to sound cliched, but a rejection isn’t the end of the world.</p>
<p>For EDI, I was rejected from Johns Hopkins. I was devastated. My brother went there, I had already made the debate team, and I was sure I was in. It took weeks, but eventually I realized it wasn’t the place for me. I love the city, I love liberal arts, and I wanted to be surrounded by creativity, not incessant studying. I convinced myself that I belonged there, and I wrote convincing essays, but the admissions committee really did know best. I might have known deep down that I didn’t belong there, that I wasn’t a mechanical engineer, that I wasn’t a Hopkins student. But it took that rejection letter to open my eyes to what I loved and what I wanted out of college.</p>
<p>Everything will work out, whether you realize it this week, next week, or next month. </p>
<p>The admissions committee knows if you will truly achieve your potential as a student at NYU, and you just have to trust that.</p>
<p>Mind you, I’ll still be depressed if I get rejected because, hey, I’m human.</p>