Paper letter in addition to online notification?

<p>I was just wondering if Berkeley sends a paper letter of admission/rejection in addition to checking the status online?</p>

<p>I know they send admissions through mail, not sure about rejection though</p>

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<p>Thanks! So will they be sending out the letters for admission tomorrow, then, when they are releasing them via the internet?</p>

<p>I wouldn’t blame them for not sending rejections. If they are rejecting 30,000+ people, I’d rather them save the paper.</p>

<p>Admissions and rejections both are available online tomorrow afternoon thru the myberkeleyapp site.</p>

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<p>I won’t have internet starting tomorrow morning for a few days because we’re working on remodeling part of our house. That’s why I was wondering if there was a paper letter that came in a reasonable time frame after decisions go on-line or whether I would have to wait until we get our internet back…</p>

<p>actually I don’t know when you could realistically expect a physical letter to come through, I’d imagine it would take a while after the electronic notifications</p>

<p>go to a public library or internet cafe or friends house or school computer.</p>

<p>Rejections are only online.</p>

<p>I didn’t get my UCLA acceptance letter until more than a week after I found out online. I live only a couple of hours aways too, so you may not get your letter for a week at the latest. I don’t understand why can’t you just check at school? Your GC will be happy to help you</p>

<p>I was wondering, has Berkeley always used the same policy of not sending rejection letters or did it just start doing that recently? I remember as a kid thinking of how the whole process was based on getting letters and opening them up and all but now it’s all electronic haha</p>

<p>Berkeley doesn’t send letters on the same day the online decisions come out. But letters will usually go out within a week.</p>

<p>They do not send rejection letters (as not sending them saves paper and money).</p>

<p>Just get access to the internet somewhere else and check. I am sure your high school library or public library would have computers with internet access that you could use.</p>