Withdrawing my Application

<p>Can anybody tell me how to go about withdrawing my application? I don't see any links to it on their website. Should I just send the admissions office an email?</p>

<p>yes. (10char)</p>

<p>why would you withdraw? Stanford doesn't require it, and I'm sure you already paid, so why not see if you get in?</p>

<p>If he/she has already been accepte to another school, it is in my opinion, the right thing to do to withdraw since if accepted, that is a seat that someone else could have had. Also, I assume the applicant applied under an early program which would also require withdrawal.</p>

<p>They applied SCEA, I do understand what you are saying. Definately withdraw if you have no desire to go anywhere but Stanford, I guess. Now that I think about, it is definately the right thing to do.</p>

<p>thanks guys. i sent them an email already.</p>

<p>Eh...CMA1 they just take a kid from defer pool.</p>

<p>Myself I wouldn't have bothered...emails can be bothersome...besides, maybe you'll get better financial aid etc...and it might help you for grad school.</p>

<p>You mean the waitlist pool? I'm talking about if the applicant is accepted RD. At that point, they could take someone from the waitlist, but it would be a lot better for someone, if they didn't have to rely upon getting in from the waitlist. Also, again, it is a requirement of the poster's acceptance that all other applications be withdrawn.</p>

<p>SCEA is non-binding and therefore doesn't require the student to withdraw all other applications if accepted.</p>

<p>Edit: ^^^ beat me to it.</p>

<p>It wasn't a requirement, as they applied to Stanford SCEA. It is non-binding. I read somewhere that nobody got in from the waiting list last year. Was that true?</p>

<p>Probably. They had a higher yield than expected.</p>

<p>Sorry, thanks for clarifying. Still think though that the poster did an admirable thing by emailing Princeton.</p>

<p>Yeah, it's definatly nice, as it could open up that spot for one of us!</p>