<p>I doubt it will hurt. As for me, i sent my resume to the Undergraduate Admissions
Application Processing Center, not to ILR. should i send it again?</p>
<p>whats EOP?</p>
<p>EOP = Educational Opportunity Program</p>
<p>It's for candidates from low income families. It helps those with "lesser" applications because the assumption is that you haven't had the opportunity or resources to do your best because of your family/life situation.</p>
<p>When I met with an ILR adcom, he said that the application review process is very elaborate and they go through each and every application equally to ensure the "best" class. Therefore, iwantcolly, a "late" application isn't too bad :o</p>
<p>blase07, you're absolutely correct. Cornell received my transcript 2 weeks after the latest deadline for regular admissions. They had already withdrawn my application when I checked on my app. status. But I contacted Cornell, telling them that my school should have sent my high school transcript a month ago. The admissions office said send it..and I end up becoming a GT for ILR.</p>
<p>ga213, definitely write a letter to Cornell telling them that it is still your number one choice and why. But don't do it right now. They need time to sort through the RD applications. Wait until very end of Jan or sometime in Feb. If you have good midyear grades, you should mention them in your letter (prob your GC has to send them).</p>
<p>On another thread, the mother of a current ILR student said that no one has been notified RD before April 1st in the past three years. True?</p>
<p>I'm sorry, but what is a GT?</p>
<p>I heard decisions are "released" starting late Feb...</p>
<p>blase07, do you mind saying what your application status says at the moment? I'm wondering whether every ILR applicant's has the same timeframe on it.</p>
<p>GT= Guaranteed transfer, people who are GT spend a year or two (in my case one year for ILR) at a different college while fulfilling required courses with a GPA of no lower than 3.3!</p>