<p>Can you apply to Penn ED and still apply to other colleges EA? Thanks</p>
<p>yes </p>
<p>unless it's Georgetown or Yale SCEA</p>
<p>****ttt really? I wanted to apply Gtown EA also. Thanks</p>
<p>Can't do Stanford SCEA and Penn either.</p>
<p>lol UGH XD</p>
<p>what do you do if you get in your ED and your EA school? which one do you have to go to?</p>
<p>The ED one, since it's binding.</p>
<p>wait i thought Georgetown wasnt SCEA. Why cant you apply to Gtown EA and Penn ED</p>
<p>Because Georgetown doesn't allow students to apply ED anywhere else (although students can apply to as many EA schools as they want)</p>
<p>Be careful and check with your GC about this first. Most schools will have you sign ED agreements that you will honor the binding agreement and therefore the school will want you to apply to only ONE Early program - ED or EA; not both.</p>
<p>Yale and Stanford have restrictive Early programs; Georgetown is more liberal I think. All Colleges with early programs typically let you apply to any school that has a Rolling Admissions program.</p>
<p>If you applied to Yale EA and Penn ED & you got in both, you would HAVE to go to Penn, so what would be the point to apply to Yale EA? (you would feel awful if Yale was really your first choice but now you are bound to go to Penn)</p>
<p>If I'm not mistaken, you can't apply Early Action to Yale if your applying Early Decision to Penn since Yale's EA is restrictive, which means you can only apply to Penn or Yale.</p>
<p>But I'm confused. What about colleges like Baylor who have a non restrictive Early Action Program. Can I apply ED UPenn and still apply EA Baylor. Hmmmm... Can someone help me out here ?</p>