<p>Which of the top 50 schools provide EA's?
I know Georgetown U provides EA, but where else??
Thanks!</p>
<p>Just about every top school offers either ED or EA. Just check the admissions websites of the schools you're looking at.</p>
<p>Chicago and Harvard have EA.</p>
<p>This is it for early action:
Boston College
CalTech
Case Western
Fordham
Georgetown
Harvard
MIT
Notre Dame
Stanford
University of Chicago
UCONN
Universit of Maryland-College Park
UNC
Villanova
Yale</p>
<p>beginning, he wasnt asking which ones have EA or ED. He was aking which ones have EA, which is non binding.</p>
<p>You should get a College Guide like Fiske's, and then look up the schools that you are interested in, and see if they have EA. It is listed in bold print at the end of each review.</p>
<p>Here's a list of almost every school that offers EA:
<a href="http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/college/rankings/brief/webex/earlyact_brief.php%5B/url%5D">http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/college/rankings/brief/webex/earlyact_brief.php</a></p>
<p>will schools know if you did ED to one school and then EA (not single choice obviously) to another?</p>
<p>
[quote]
beginning, he wasnt asking which ones have EA or ED. He was aking which ones have EA, which is non binding.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I got that. What I'm saying is that nearly every school offers one or the other, so coming up with a list is silly. Just check on the schools you're interested in.</p>
<p>Some schools allow it, Senior06. For example, Columbia ED allows EA applications to other schools.</p>
<p>And you can always do ED II if you've already done EA.</p>
<p>thanks for all the input esp cre8tive, chocoholic and warbler! and btw, im a girl!!!! not a HEEE! lol. i was just asking because i also have to apply for uk schools, which makes it hard for me, as i have to research half a million schools! but... can international students apply for ea and a financial aid at the same time?</p>
<p>You can only apply to 1 school ED but simultaneously you can apply to any number of schools EA and Regular D. But, if accepted to the ED school, you must withdraw all the other applications; you are committed. </p>
<p>There is also Single Choice EA (SCEA). You can only do one SCEA, no other EAs or ED. But you are not committed to going to that school. Therefore you can wait and weigh financial options like EA.</p>
<p>If a school offers EA, it is to your benefit to use it. There is more scholarship money available early. Maybe a case where EA would not be a benefit is if you want to take the SATs again and hope to raise a score.</p>
<p>jenni87: another factor is ROLLING ADMISSIONS. This is RD, but you find out the decision "when it's processed", not on some date in March or April. This can be as little as 2 weeks after all the papers are in place. Rolling Decisions are often used at state schools but there are Private schools using it. Eg, it is possible to have a decision from a Big 10 school in October or November under rolling admissions.</p>
<p>Stanford is SCEA, by the way</p>
<p>as are Harvard and Yale..</p>
<p>and you can ED and EA (non single choice)????</p>
<p>really? thats very surprising to me.</p>