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10 more days. Not that I'm counting or anything 😛
My top choice school didn't start waitlist movement until very late May/early June last year 🙁
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10 more days. Not that I'm counting or anything 😛
One of my schools sends out a bunch of waitlist acceptances on May 16. Yay![]()
That's the slow one.
Not if they accept you after you withdrew from the other schools.Can schools that accepted you see the schools you were accepted in but you withdrew from after said acceptance?
Can a school you've been waitlisted at see your other waitlists?Not if they accept you after you withdrew from the other schools.
Can a school you've been waitlisted at see your other waitlists?
Thank you chenzt. The waiting's almost over yall.No. The only schools that knows which wait list you are on are the schools that wait listed you themselves.
No. The only schools that knows which wait list you are on are the schools that wait listed you themselves.
I thought @gyngyn said that after March or so, schools can see 'everything'. So I assumed that is WLs too.
I would be interested to know this too.
I thought @gyngyn said that after March or so, schools can see 'everything'. So I assumed that is WLs too.
We don't really need more information about the candidate. We need to know how many seats there are to fill!Thanks.
(I am only on WLs) and I think that it makes sense that you not see anything until you make a decision to accept. By wait listing then waiting till march/April you're just waiting and getting outside information that can influence your decision.
We don't really need more information about the candidate. We need to know how many seats there are to fill!
Are you able to tell whether the "waitlist cascade" will be big or small in a given year? And what variables feed into the overall cascade trend?
In other words, will waitlists be tapped extensively or minimally this year? 🙂
(For those who don't know, the cascade is: Stanford takes someone from UoMichigan, who takes someone from USC, who takes someone from etc. etc.)
No, the number and penetrance of unknowns is too great e.g. risk tolerance of schools at the top of the food chain (as well as state schools), prestige seeking/cost avoidance of the pool. This is why the acceptance algorithm at each school is an approximation at best. The errors in estimation get corrected with the waitlist.Are you able to tell whether the "waitlist cascade" will be big or small in a given year? And what variables feed into the overall cascade trend?
In other words, will waitlists be tapped extensively or minimally this year? 🙂
(For those who don't know, the cascade is: Stanford takes someone from UoMichigan, who takes someone from USC, who takes someone from etc. etc.)
Sorry if this seems nitpicky, but can you see the number of waitlists someone holds even though you don't know where specifically they are holding waitlists?In March we began to see where accepted students were holding acceptances.
In April we are additionally able to see where our waitlisted candidates are holding acceptances.
We can never see where you applied or where you are waitlisted.
We can see nothing until we make a decision.
No.Sorry if this seems nitpicky, but can you see the number of waitlists someone holds even though you don't know where specifically they are holding waitlists?
Thank you
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Is it terrible if a letter of interest exceeds one page? I was rejected from several programs due to a lack of clinical and service experience, as well as an unfocused interest/motivation for medicine (consequent to the lack of experience), so I spent a paragraph highlighting my relevant experience and clarifying my interest in medicine. Another paragraph trying to sell myself to the school. And two or three more paragraphs describing why the school is right for me. I think it will be about 1.5 to 2 pages long.
I know people don't like reading a lot of material, but this stuff is important!
Is it terrible if a letter of interest exceeds one page? I was rejected from several programs due to a lack of clinical and service experience, as well as an unfocused interest/motivation for medicine (consequent to the lack of experience), so I spent a paragraph highlighting my relevant experience and clarifying my interest in medicine. Another paragraph trying to sell myself to the school. And two or three more paragraphs describing why the school is right for me. I think it will be about 1.5 to 2 pages long.
I know people don't like reading a lot of material, but this stuff is important!
Sorry if this has already been answered on here... But do any schools start rejecting people from waitlists after May 15? Or at this point would the only decision be an acceptance?
My understanding is that if you've been put on a Waitlist the only other decision you can get is an acceptance. Otherwise you'll just hear silence until either you or the school begins classes .
It wouldn't make sense for schools to reject people off of the Waitlist because up until the first day of class they can still have students withdraw their acceptances and need to fill those spots.
Thank you for sharing that.In March we began to see where accepted students were holding acceptances.
In April we are additionally able to see where our waitlisted candidates are holding acceptances.
We can never see where you applied or where you are waitlisted.
We can see nothing until we make a decision.
1 more week until May 15th! I feel like I will be 10x sadder if I don't hear anything from my waitlist schools during the next wave of acceptances than the initial waitlist decisions because my hope will basically dwindle down to barely anything 🙁
This is my feeling exactly. 3 waitlists, no yesses.
Thank you for sharing that.
This is my feeling exactly. 3 waitlists, no yesses.
.Hi all--there is hope. I got off the waitlist at my top choice school! (Top 5 school) Best of luck. There will be movement!
Decisions are now in the hands of admissions deans (for the most part) who will use the opinions of the committee to guide their choices.Should we try to time our update/interest letters before or after the 15th? Or totally dependent on the school and when their adcoms meet?
Should we try to time our update/interest letters before or after the 15th? Or totally dependent on the school and when their adcoms meet?
Don't you think too much power goes into one person's hand?Decisions are now in the hands of admissions deans (for the most part) who will use the opinions of the committee to guide their choices.
Don't you think too much power goes into one person's hand?
If people have to move fast to pull people off the waitlist, I would say no. The committee already gave input several times. They decided to interview you and waitlist you.
When one is in the real world, things can often come down to just one person making a hiring/firing decision.
If people have to move fast to pull people off the waitlist, I would say no. The committee already gave input several times. They decided to interview you and waitlist you.
When one is in the real world, things can often come down to just one person making a hiring/firing decision.
Decisions are now in the hands of admissions deans (for the most part) who will use the opinions of the committee to guide their choices.
So....much....power!! Mwahahaha.
But seriously, it can be a good thing too.
From this point on, decisions need to be made in a time frame that does not allow for the gathering of all who contributed to the original decision. In an effective system, a sufficient amount of information and opinion from the group will have been compiled in a way that one person can realize the goals of the main body.Don't you think too much power goes into one person's hand?
I'm sure this varies quite a bit, so I won't speculate on all methods.How are updates and letters usually handled from here on out? I imagine they either make it to the dean's desk or are filed away. If they're filed, are they also flagged as containing an update that needs to be seen?