question about stanford

I though they had EA. But now I checked and it says SCEA. Is true this year(class of 2006) or does this start later on?
Doesn’t rice also have EA?

<p>Stanford has had SCEA since last year (2003-2004), which is also when Harvard and Yale also switched from ED to SCEA. As for schools that still have EA, the ones that come to my mind are CalTech, MIT, and Georgetown.</p>

<p>Rice has ED (single choice) and EA (non single choice) as well as regular. theyve got it all covered.</p>

<p>Stanford, Yale and Harvard all have SCEA</p>

<p>Ummm...I believe Rice has Interim Decision, which is different than Early Action and permits you to apply to Early Action schools (including SCEA).</p>

<p>I was looking for an EA school to apply along with my rolling admissions schools and ED school.</p>

<p>Boston College and Notre Dame are also EA schools.</p>

<p>Most schools won't let you do EA AND ED.</p>

<p>Chicago, Gtown, MIT and Caltech all have EA, but won't let you also do an ED program (but you can do more than one of those EA programs).</p>

<p>I suggest doing Stanford SCEA and then Rice Interm Decision. I did the ID thing and got in.</p>

<p>I plan on EDing to Columbia and it says that while it's not prohibited it's not encouraged to apply to EA to another school. So I was looking for a EA school I could apply to. Are there any schools that allow EDing to other schools while providing EA?</p>

<p>Isn't MIT SCEA now too?</p>

<p>Are you sure Chicago won't let you apply EA and still apply ED somewhere else? I don't see anything about that on their website. It just says that it is non-binding and that you can apply to other schools.</p>

<p>by SCEA I'm guessing you can still apply to other schools under RD?</p>

<p>You can apply ED to Columbia and EA to Chicago as of right now.</p>

<p>SCEA only applies to the early round of applications. You can apply to any other school RD.</p>