<p>^^Really thepapercrane is a freshman? God at that age I hadn't the least of clues where I would apply or pretty much anything about universities. Yeah I completely agree with you chillaxin apply SCEA if Stanford is your first choice. To tell you the truth I actually didn't apply to any university in early admission (something that I regret btw) cuz I was really torn between 3 universities...</p>
<p>Where are you at, superwizard?</p>
<p>^^^Do you mean where do I live?</p>
<p>hehe, yeah, i am, but i'm going to be a sophomore next year... :)</p>
<p>Ah. I meant your college, superwizard.</p>
<p>yeah. the reason why I thought that the reason why SCEA applicants had a higher acceptance rate was because I read something on the Yale University website--
"Is there an advantage to applying Single-Choice Early Action to Yale?"
'Historically, the rate of admission among early applicants has been higher than the overall admission rate. On the other hand, this higher rate reflects the fact that many of our strongest candidates apply early.'</p>
<p>but I guess... yale is yale, and stanford is stanford...? :-P heh.</p>
<p>Oh in that case I'm going to go to Stanford next year. Out of my top 3 I only got into Stanford anyways (MIT, Stanford, Princeton) so I automatically chose Stanford. I'm glad I didn't have to chose between them.:) And thepapercrane good for you if your planning ahead so early :D</p>
<p>****.</p>
<p>I'm jealous.</p>
<p>Allow me to point out, thepapercrane, that Yale's assertion that the early class is stronger is simply not true. </p>
<p>Early classes have often been thought to be slightly weaker than the RD classes, and much smaller.</p>
<p>Don't be ManUtd20Ole :D And yes I agree with zephyr151 people who get in in EA might not have in RD...</p>