Top student deferred?

<p>I applied through the Priority application in September.
My stats:</p>

<p>2260 SAT
4.47 Weighted GPA
Class rank: about 20 (out of 460)
4 APs Senior Year
President of Debate Team, Editor of Newspaper, etc.
Good recs, academic awards like Governor's School
Decent essay</p>

<p>Not to sound pretentious or anything.. but I know people with 1800s and got B's in every class who got in. How did I get deferred? I really don't understand.</p>

<p>If anyone is willing to help explain my bafflement, I'd really appreciate it.
Thanks.</p>

<p>I don’t want to come off as sounding snobbish or anything but I’m just really confused.</p>

<p>Sometimes top students get deferred because the school does not think they will actually attend, especially if they have not demonstrated sufficient interest in the school.</p>

<p>Did you do the optional essay?</p>

<p>Yes: FutureVP is in the know: if a top student doesn’t take the time to write the optional “why tulane” essay, then tulane knows you are just throwing your application over the transom to collect an acceptance pelt. They simply will not admit you. You could have had 2400’s.</p>

<p>Me too! I have a lower SAT but otherwise pretty equivalent. I wrote a somewhat…lengthier…post about the same thing last night after I got my decision where I sound actually quite snobby in retrospect haha. Too bad you cant edit these things once you’ve calmed down. But same, I was just confused and really dissapointed. I applied really close to the deadline, I know people like the ones you mentioned who applied really really early and got in like a month ago so maybe that has something to do with it?</p>

<p>If you really want to have the pelt on your wall, just write a “why tulane” letter to tulanw and you will probably be accepted.</p>

<p>I wrote the “Why Tulane” - and I thought it was pretty good - but I still haven’t heard and assume I’ll be seeing a deferral or rejection. My stats were pretty decent: 2090 SAT; rank 5/576; UW GPA 3.95; National Hispanic Scholar; AP Scholar with Distinction (5s on all my APs); lots of leadership in ECs; blah blah blah. </p>

<p>I suppose they just didn’t like my essays… or maybe since I haven’t had the chance to visit Tulane yet (was planning to go in Feb) they think I’m not interested… or I just had lousy luck?</p>

<p>It is all a game they play to inflate their data for college rankings. They get (or purchase) a list of students with ACT scores over 32 or SAT over 2100, send them a “priority” application, waive application fee, and than defer them - knowing they probably are also applying to more selective schools and using Tulane as a safety. They love it.</p>

<p>Really glad I didn’t see this before I applied. I got in in about a week from when I applied, the weekend before November 15. I didn’t do the optional essay and showed no reason to want to go to Tulane (I don’t, so yeah). Kind of assumed they would take me (slightly higher test scores and a perfect GPA). But I know people with similar stats as me who were deferred… it seems kind of random. Maybe they read mine earlier than yours and realized kind of late in the game that everyone was applying to them as their safety.</p>

<p>Sorry sharkey, but that is just silly. Take a look at the formula for USNWR rankings, and you will see that percent acceptance rate is about 1% of the weighting. That would be a huge amount of work and money spent for something that doesn’t even move the needle. The factors that really affect rankings are peer/counselor assessments and 6 year graduation rates. Together those account for over 50% of the weighting.</p>

<p>If people are looking for perfect agreement between the stats of applicants and acceptance decisions, they will be disappointed. Not only is it not all based on stats, but it is a process done by human beings, and so while certainly not random, it also won’t be perfectly consistent. That is why people that truly want to go to Tulane should let them know this.</p>

<p>stand by my statement</p>

<p>Tufts Syndrome</p>

<p>fallenchemist, student selectivity for the entering class counts for 15% of the ranking, and of this 15% , 40% is for students in top 10% of class, and 50% is for ACT/SAT scores.</p>

<p>That has nothing to do with what you said. That only counts for students that actually enroll, not those that just apply. You said it yourself, those weightings are for “the entering class”. How can they enter if they haven’t been accepted? How does deferring these students make an ounce of difference for that stat? In fact, saying Tufts Syndrome makes no sense either. The students were deferred, not rejected.</p>

<p>Sharkey is starting to sound like that old poster from pennsylvania…</p>

<p>@jym626: I think you hit the nail on the head. Take a look at Sharkey’s posting history: same snarky, know-it-all comments.</p>

<p>I’d just like to point out that although some strong students may get deferred, that is by no means the rule. For instance, I had a 34 ACT and got in with a 27k scholarship. I know a girl (who graduated from my school last year) who was stellar, but was wait listed at Tulane. Obviously, the adcom takes into account more than just the numbers, so you can’t say they’re rejecting strong applicants because they think they’ll go elsewhere. Wouldn’t the adcom want to put together the strongest class possible?</p>

<p>They defer/waitlist strong applicants if they have reason to believe they are not serious about Tulane. Again, this won’t be 100%, there are always exceptions where someone didn’t do the “Why Tulane” nor did they show up at Tulane events, but they get accepted anyway. Hard to know the reasons sometimes, but for the last few years it has gotten much more common for these students to be deferred/waitlisted.</p>

<p>You are right oceanicole, of course. Tulane is certainly trying to get the strongest class possible of students that really want to be at Tulane.</p>

<p>This was just posted by Jeff Schiffman, Senior Associate Director of Admissions at Tulane.</p>

<p>

</p>