Please correct me on any misconception I have in anything I write here.. I am a little in the dark about this rolling admissions process.
So some schools have an admissions process called rolling admissions where you fill out your AMCAS, fill out your secondary, go and interview, and find out in a few weeks whether you're in or not. This is the alternative process to the other schools that have a set acceptance/denial date sometime in March (or some schools that have 2-3 of these dates) where all the people who have interviewed are reviewed and either accepted or rejected on the same date.
The impression I get from rolling admissions is that if a school has rolling admissions, it favors the student since he/she will know immediately which school he can go to and not even waste time interviewing at those "fall back" schools that all of us are appyling to. one thing I don't understand is if you get offered an acceptance at School A, can you defer accepting the offer until you find out in March what other schools that are not rolling accepted you, or do you have to accept/reject it immediately? In the MSARs, there's always a notice that says "applicants must reply within 3 weeks of their notification of acceptance." Does this reply mean they will accept/reject or just if they acknowledge it and then say they will decide later to attend the school or not?
More questions: Why do schools with rolling admissions say to apply early? I understand that slots fill up, but are slots
#80 through #100 necessarily harder to get than slots #1 through #20? and maybe if you wait until February to apply and the med school has gotten only low-quality applicants up to that point, you'd be accepted easily even though people with lower stats than you were rejected earlier in the year, no?
also, it seems like all the top tier schools (Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Yale, Columbia, etc) all have non-rolling admissions. Does non-rolling seem to favor the university since they will be able to select the absolute best students to fill their slots in March and not have to "waste" slots on lower quality applicants if they had decided to use rolling?
-Cantal
So some schools have an admissions process called rolling admissions where you fill out your AMCAS, fill out your secondary, go and interview, and find out in a few weeks whether you're in or not. This is the alternative process to the other schools that have a set acceptance/denial date sometime in March (or some schools that have 2-3 of these dates) where all the people who have interviewed are reviewed and either accepted or rejected on the same date.
The impression I get from rolling admissions is that if a school has rolling admissions, it favors the student since he/she will know immediately which school he can go to and not even waste time interviewing at those "fall back" schools that all of us are appyling to. one thing I don't understand is if you get offered an acceptance at School A, can you defer accepting the offer until you find out in March what other schools that are not rolling accepted you, or do you have to accept/reject it immediately? In the MSARs, there's always a notice that says "applicants must reply within 3 weeks of their notification of acceptance." Does this reply mean they will accept/reject or just if they acknowledge it and then say they will decide later to attend the school or not?
More questions: Why do schools with rolling admissions say to apply early? I understand that slots fill up, but are slots
#80 through #100 necessarily harder to get than slots #1 through #20? and maybe if you wait until February to apply and the med school has gotten only low-quality applicants up to that point, you'd be accepted easily even though people with lower stats than you were rejected earlier in the year, no?
also, it seems like all the top tier schools (Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Yale, Columbia, etc) all have non-rolling admissions. Does non-rolling seem to favor the university since they will be able to select the absolute best students to fill their slots in March and not have to "waste" slots on lower quality applicants if they had decided to use rolling?
-Cantal