- Joined
- Jun 26, 2014
- Messages
- 93
- Reaction score
- 86
We don't have to be excessively informed, but a general idea would be better. Like just enough to placate us. If everyone knew where their name was and could see others name that would also lead to a lot of unscrupulous behavior, if you ask me.
One thing I do ask for is that schools that aren't as revealing of info should give us more rational excuses about way or just be direct ("we're busy, we don't have the staff and man power to handle this, and if we did it'd drastically slow down the process"). Hearing "we can't give you feedback because our process is too complicated" when you're rejected, for example, really seems like a big excuse.
The problem is your "general idea" of informed versus mine or the next guy's may be completely different. You will never please everyone. My hypothetical was just that, a hypothetical. I was trying to use it to show the huge spectrum of information transparency that a school could provide. It is obviously not plausible with people's names and everything, but say you gave everyone passwords or code names, the analogy would still stand. The school's have to decide based on their resources how much information to provide to the candidates. And they are just that candidates. We are begging them to go to their school, not the other way around. If you were competitive for the school against the other people who applied, you would have gotten in straight away with no waitlist placement. Not trying to be harsh, but complaining about how you still have a chance to get into school when many others have had to deal with rejection and reapplying his cycle, seems a bit ungrateful.
Also, from what I understand many schools will give you information on how to improve your application to make you more competitive for the next cycle after they have rejected you. Not sure I have ever heard someone being dismissed being told "our process is too complicated". Is this something you encountered at a school this cycle?