High Alternate= nice way of saying waitlisted???

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MDROCKSTAR

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Are there different levels of waitlists-- high alternate, medium alternate, and low alternate --or do they just tell anyone that is not unconditionally accepted, that they are a high alternate. If there are distinctions, if you are a high alternate how good are your chances of actually getting in?
 
If your high alternate you are probably in the top 50 students on the list. It be nice if schools did tells us where we are, because if your #20 on the wait-list you definitely have a real good chance of getting in. That would make it easier on us to decide between schools.
 
i bet it basically means your in, but we have to wait until march to tell you.
 
Not all schools will tell you where you are on the waitlist. Some won't even give you generalized categories. I can only speak to what I know though. So, last year, I was...

* Waitlisted at ATSU-SOMA. Got the acceptance phone call one week later. The phone call actually came before my waitlist letter arrived.

* Waitlisted at Touro-NV. I believe they don't do any waitlist moving until after the acceptance period is over. At that time, they will let you know generally where you stand on the waitlist. (Top 1/3rd, middle 1/3rd, bottom 1/3rd.) I received an e-mail telling me I was in the Top 1/3rd, and then on the same day received my acceptance phone call.

* High-Waitlisted at Western, very late in the acceptance cycle. Received an acceptance letter, telling me it was first-come, first-serve (essentially.) Something like 7 spots available for 20+ people. Everyone's impression was that at that point, with the 7 spots remaining, they sent these letters to all the remaining high-waitlisters.

With that in mind, I would say that being high-waitlisted gives you a good chance of being accepted. Some people think it's "You would have been accepted, if..."(fill in the reason here.) It's good news...it's certainly better than a rejection, even though it's more prolonged. 😉
 
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