<p>Harvard and Princeton abolished their early admissions programs, meaning that probably a good deal of people who would have applied early at one of those schools will apply early at Yale instead.</p>
<p>SCEA is single choice early action. It’s like regular EA in that it’s non binding, but it’s unique in that if you apply early to yale, then you are commiting to apply early to only yale and no other college. People speculate that harvard/princeton hopefuls may apply to yale early next year to get an advantage at one of the nation’s best colleges as a back up plan in case they don’t get into their first choice during the regular round.</p>
<p>I’ll be interested to see if Yale or Stanford receives the bigger boost in SCEA apps when controlling for the overall size of the applicant pool–i.e. which school the typical Harvard or Princeton wannabe identifies with more.</p>
<p>yeah, I’d probably say yale. not because stanford is any less spectacular than yale, but because harvard, yale and princeton are all on the east coast, whereas stanford is on the west</p>
<p>I agree as well, although I quickly observed at the Stanford admit weekend the mass amounts of fellow cross admits with MIT. For those who haven’t investigated the great engineering opportunities at Yale, applied science majors who may have applied to Princeton ED (its engineering is ranked in the top ten) will opt for MIT or Stanford EA.</p>