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Posted: Mon May 06, 2013 4:57 am
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Ed to NU comes with full ride, and they specifically prohibit multiple EDs per cycle even if they don't overlap. No shot ED to NUPRgradBYU wrote:With a GPA that low, my traditional advice would be to RETAKE and aim for the mid-170s... but you're going to have an unpredictable cycle no matter what. Definitely ED to NU and UVA.
Touché. That makes sense, given the $150k scholly NU offers.Clearlynotstefan wrote:Ed to NU comes with full ride, and they specifically prohibit multiple EDs per cycle even if they don't overlap. No shot ED to NUPRgradBYU wrote:With a GPA that low, my traditional advice would be to RETAKE and aim for the mid-170s... but you're going to have an unpredictable cycle no matter what. Definitely ED to NU and UVA.
Interpreting NU's ED policy as a Prohibition against non-overlapping ED's is a mistake. It seems to be a slightly ambiguous prohibition against concurrent.Clearlynotstefan wrote:Ed to NU comes with full ride, and they specifically prohibit multiple EDs per cycle even if they don't overlap. No shot ED to NUPRgradBYU wrote:With a GPA that low, my traditional advice would be to RETAKE and aim for the mid-170s... but you're going to have an unpredictable cycle no matter what. Definitely ED to NU and UVA.
Don't ED UVA. The application pool keeps shrinking and shrinking. 3.3/170 is a T14 lock even in good times. Right now, you may see money.Dr. Dre wrote:OP: ED UVA
does anyone know if this upcoming cycle will be even more unpredictable than the most recent?
"Early Decision candidates commit themselves to matriculating at Northwestern Law if admitted pursuant to the Early Decision program. An applicant may not be an Early Decision candidate at more than one school during the same admissions cycle. Candidates applying to Northwestern through the Early Decision program may apply to other law schools on a regular decision basis. However, they must understand and agree that they are required to immediately withdraw all other law school applications if they are accepted to Northwestern as an Early Decision candidate and that they may not initiate any new applications after they have been informed of their acceptance to Northwestern under the Early Decision program."Desert Fox wrote:Interpreting NU's ED policy as a Prohibition against non-overlapping ED's is a mistake. It seems to be a slightly ambiguous prohibition against concurrent.Clearlynotstefan wrote:Ed to NU comes with full ride, and they specifically prohibit multiple EDs per cycle even if they don't overlap. No shot ED to NUPRgradBYU wrote:With a GPA that low, my traditional advice would be to RETAKE and aim for the mid-170s... but you're going to have an unpredictable cycle no matter what. Definitely ED to NU and UVA.
Clearlynotstefan wrote:"Early Decision candidates commit themselves to matriculating at Northwestern Law if admitted pursuant to the Early Decision program. An applicant may not be an Early Decision candidate at more than one school during the same admissions cycle(You aren't an ED candidate any more if you get dinged. I was an ED candidate at UVA, then I Was one at NU. I was never an ED candidate at more than one school at ANY time during the admissions cycle. One then the Other. Never more than one at once) . Candidates applying to Northwestern through the Early Decision program may apply to other law schools on a regular decision basis. However, they must understand and agree that they are required to immediately withdraw all other law school applications if they are accepted to Northwestern as an Early Decision candidate and that they may not initiate any new applications after they have been informed of their acceptance to Northwestern under the Early Decision program."Desert Fox wrote:Interpreting NU's ED policy as a Prohibition against non-overlapping ED's is a mistake. It seems to be a slightly ambiguous prohibition against concurrent.Clearlynotstefan wrote:Ed to NU comes with full ride, and they specifically prohibit multiple EDs per cycle even if they don't overlap. No shot ED to NUPRgradBYU wrote:With a GPA that low, my traditional advice would be to RETAKE and aim for the mid-170s... but you're going to have an unpredictable cycle no matter what. Definitely ED to NU and UVA.
That said, I'm sure it's questionably enforced, especially the you can't apply ED to other schools after we ding you part. That's like both breaking up with someone, and telling them they can't see other people.Clearlynotstefan wrote:"Early Decision candidates commit themselves to matriculating at Northwestern Law if admitted pursuant to the Early Decision program. An applicant may not be an Early Decision candidate at more than one school during the same admissions cycle. Candidates applying to Northwestern through the Early Decision program may apply to other law schools on a regular decision basis. However, they must understand and agree that they are required to immediately withdraw all other law school applications if they are accepted to Northwestern as an Early Decision candidate and that they may not initiate any new applications after they have been informed of their acceptance to Northwestern under the Early Decision program."Desert Fox wrote:Interpreting NU's ED policy as a Prohibition against non-overlapping ED's is a mistake. It seems to be a slightly ambiguous prohibition against concurrent.Clearlynotstefan wrote:Ed to NU comes with full ride, and they specifically prohibit multiple EDs per cycle even if they don't overlap. No shot ED to NUPRgradBYU wrote:With a GPA that low, my traditional advice would be to RETAKE and aim for the mid-170s... but you're going to have an unpredictable cycle no matter what. Definitely ED to NU and UVA.
I'm afraid as far as this sentence goes that I just don't see the same ambiguity. It's not saying you shouldn't overlap, it says "more than one school during the same admissions cycle" You were an ED candidate at two schools in one admission cycle, whether they overlap or not. I follow that you're playing on this I stopped being a candidate when they dinged me thing, but you clearly were an ED candidate at more than one school that cycle, even if they didn't overlap."Early Decision candidates commit themselves to matriculating at Northwestern Law if admitted pursuant to the Early Decision program. An applicant may not be an Early Decision candidate at more than one school during the same admissions cycle(You aren't an ED candidate any more if you get dinged. I was an ED candidate at UVA, then I Was one at NU. I was never an ED candidate at more than one school at ANY time during the admissions cycle. One then the Other. Never more than one at once) .
looking at your info Tekrul, I must wonder, why did you choose to graduate in three years? Aren't you at Columbia UG? I can't imagine why you wouldn't have taken a 4th year to raise your GPA/learn more stuff/have more fun. Especially if you knew you were applying to LS. I would have fought to stay in UG longer than my 4 years if I could ... work life blows.Tekrul wrote:Retake to mid 170's. I had a 3.2 GPA too.
As a splitter it will not be easy to say where you are out for certain or where you are in for certain. But by bringing that LSAT up to 174+ and blanketing t-14, I would expect a few hits and some of those with money.
ED UVA is a hangover from the conventional wisdom of several years ago operating on the premises that;cahwc12 wrote:Why do people on this forum advocate ED to UVA under any circumstances? This is probably the best possible argument for ED UVA (with OP's numbers), but you're consigning him to $300k of debt for what is still unarguably a lot of risk. NU's ED comes with a full ride, better job placement, and a healthier market.
What advantages does UVA's ED actually confer? Given OP's WE in Chicago, ED NU sounds like a great choice and he has a good shot there. UVA doesn't really get him anything. Sure, he could get in, but he could probably get in RD as well, and would you advocate UVA RD at sticker as a contender? Probably not...
Because NU ED comes with a full ride it's MORE competitive than RD, not the other way around. Op would get rolled into RD and likely admitted, but it's a waste of the ED. Better idea to use the ED for a reach like Penn.cahwc12 wrote:Why do people on this forum advocate ED to UVA under any circumstances? This is probably the best possible argument for ED UVA (with OP's numbers), but you're consigning him to $300k of debt for what is still unarguably a lot of risk. NU's ED comes with a full ride, better job placement, and a healthier market.
What advantages does UVA's ED actually confer? Given OP's WE in Chicago, ED NU sounds like a great choice and he has a good shot there. UVA doesn't really get him anything. Sure, he could get in, but he could probably get in RD as well, and would you advocate UVA RD at sticker as a contender? Probably not...
Penn is basically no shot, even ED. UVA is the highest ranked school where ED could open up a chance at acceptance with a 3.25. that's the point.Clearlynotstefan wrote:Because NU ED comes with a full ride it's MORE competitive than RD, not the other way around. Op would get rolled into RD and likely admitted, but it's a waste of the ED. Better idea to use the ED for a reach like Penn.cahwc12 wrote:Why do people on this forum advocate ED to UVA under any circumstances? This is probably the best possible argument for ED UVA (with OP's numbers), but you're consigning him to $300k of debt for what is still unarguably a lot of risk. NU's ED comes with a full ride, better job placement, and a healthier market.
What advantages does UVA's ED actually confer? Given OP's WE in Chicago, ED NU sounds like a great choice and he has a good shot there. UVA doesn't really get him anything. Sure, he could get in, but he could probably get in RD as well, and would you advocate UVA RD at sticker as a contender? Probably not...