What got you into..

<p>... Wharton? What do you think really sealed the deal and made the admissions committee choose you over the other candidates?</p>

<p>Also, on a more personal note, can I apply ED to Wharton but also EA to UChicago or is that not allowed?</p>

<p>That’s allowed. Most EA schools allow you to apply ED to a school. Stanford, Yale, and Georgetown are exceptions to this rule, but all other EA schools, including Chicago and MIT, are perfectly fine with you applying ED to another school.</p>

<p>^ Not quite. The EA schools are split into three groups: </p>

<p>– Stanford and Yale (Single Choice Early Action) don’t want you to apply ED OR EA anywhere else. I believe they are the only schools in this category.</p>

<p>– Georgetown and Boston College, and I believe some others, are fine with you applying to other EA schools simultaneously, but don’t permit simultaneous applications to any ED school if you are applying EA to them.</p>

<p>– Chicago and MIT, and others, don’t care if you apply ED or EA elsewhere.</p>

<p>You have to read each college’s rules carefully. Don’t make assumptions. For example, most ED colleges, like Penn, don’t care if you apply simultaneously EA elsewhere, but Brown forbids ED applicants to do that.</p>

<p>So I guess, I can apply EA to Chicago, ED to Wharton, and rolling decision (at the same time) to UMich. Great! :smiley: So what got you guys into UPenn or Wharton?</p>

<p>Also, is Wharton more math centric or economics centric?</p>

<p>jebarpolsky thats exactly what i did- EA to uchicago, ED to huntsman/wharton and Early Response rolling to Ross-Michigan.</p>

<p>I think its a good idea to do it. worked out for me anyways :)</p>

<p>my essays. showed I was a good fit.</p>

<p>Wharton isn’t math or econ centric. It’s hard-skill and application centric.</p>

<p>What did you put in your essays?</p>

<p>a little bit of me</p>

<p>Hoping that you realize only admission officers can answer your question fully.</p>