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Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 8:34 pm
by QuailMan
So I'm trying to figure the value of ED'ing my #1 school.
My GPA is .08 below their median. Avg LSAT (took twice) is at median and my highest LSAT is one point above.
It sounds like most deans say that ED doesnt really do anything positive or negative to your chances except for a few borderline cases...but it seems like I would be one of those.
I'm visiting next month to see if I'm sure I'm ready to commit there, I graduated so my GPA isnt going anywhere and my apps are going to be ready to go before Halloween, regardless of what I decide.
So do I have anything to gain from ED, or should I just get all my apps in early and see what happens?
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 8:39 pm
by 2ofspades
Which school?
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 8:41 pm
by whymeohgodno
2ofspades wrote:Which school?
Yeh this would help.
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 8:43 pm
by esq
I'm going to tag this because I have the same question. Even if it doesn't give you a boost, I wonder if by placing yourself in a select group of applicants by EDing increases the chance that they will spend more time actually considering your app - I read a statistic that said adcomms only give each app about 5 min. Any ideas out there? (Colorado is where I would like to ED)
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 9:08 pm
by QuailMan
whymeohgodno wrote:2ofspades wrote:Which school?
Yeh this would help.
UPenn
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 9:15 pm
by 2ofspades
QuailMan wrote:UPenn
If you're sure Penn is your #1 choice, you should ED to avoid getting WLed. Also, Penn doesn't average. If your highest score is a 171, that's what they'll consider.
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 10:12 pm
by GettingReady2010
esq wrote:I'm going to tag this because I have the same question. Even if it doesn't give you a boost, I wonder if by placing yourself in a select group of applicants by EDing increases the chance that they will spend more time actually considering your app - I read a statistic that said adcomms only give each app about 5 min. Any ideas out there? (Colorado is where I would like to ED)
Does anyone else find it ridiculous that poor college students give schools $50-100 to review an app for five mins? I don't even think biglaw firms bill corporations so much for so little time. If there is one legal racket (oxymoron) in the world, it's America's education system.
Just a pointless rant.
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 10:16 pm
by 2ofspades
GettingReady2010 wrote:esq wrote:I'm going to tag this because I have the same question. Even if it doesn't give you a boost, I wonder if by placing yourself in a select group of applicants by EDing increases the chance that they will spend more time actually considering your app - I read a statistic that said adcomms only give each app about 5 min. Any ideas out there? (Colorado is where I would like to ED)
Does anyone else find it ridiculous that poor college students give schools $50-100 to review an app for five mins? I don't even think biglaw firms bill corporations so much for so little time. If there is one legal racket (oxymoron) in the world, it's America's education system.
Just a pointless rant.
Sometimes when someone posts on TLS that they "read a statistic," the statistic isn't accurate. Sometimes when someone posts on TLS that they "read a statistic," they read it on TLS...
Re: Worth it to ED
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2010 10:21 pm
by beachbum
2ofspades wrote:GettingReady2010 wrote:esq wrote:I'm going to tag this because I have the same question. Even if it doesn't give you a boost, I wonder if by placing yourself in a select group of applicants by EDing increases the chance that they will spend more time actually considering your app - I read a statistic that said adcomms only give each app about 5 min. Any ideas out there? (Colorado is where I would like to ED)
Does anyone else find it ridiculous that poor college students give schools $50-100 to review an app for five mins? I don't even think biglaw firms bill corporations so much for so little time. If there is one legal racket (oxymoron) in the world, it's America's education system.
Just a pointless rant.
Sometimes when someone posts on TLS that they "read a statistic," the statistic isn't accurate. Sometimes when someone posts on TLS that they "read a statistic," they read it on TLS...
eh, I believe Anna Ivey (former Dean of Admissions at UChi) referenced this stat in her book. I have to agree with GettingReady2010: for all the time and money we spend on these apps, it seems like they should afford us more than 5 minutes.