top 30 colleges in US News that have ED or EA?

<p>What are top 30 colleges in US News that have ED or EA? </p>

<p>I know Brown has ED, and UChicago has EA. </p>

<p>I know that Harvard and Yale removed their EA.</p>

<p>All of the NESCAC schools have ED–Amherst, Trinity, Williams, Colby, Bowdoin etc—many have 2 rounds of ED–1 and 2</p>

<p>Actually, Yale is keeping SCEA, Princeton gave up ED.</p>

<p>Most of the other colleges have EA or ED. Michigan has Rolling Admissions, which basically means you can get an early decision without applying ED.</p>

<p>cornell ed</p>

<p>It would be easier to do schools without EA or ED. Cal, and UCLA dont have early anything. Michigan has rolling admissions. Harvard, Princeton, and UVA got rid of early and now have nothing. I think USC is rolling to, but I’m not sure.</p>

<p>Yup, Yale’s keeping SCEA. Dartmouth is still ED, and I <em>think</em> Stanford is keeping SCEA too.</p>

<p>Emory has ED. </p>

<p>An article in today’s Emory Wheel says that Emory received 858 applications for ED I and admitted 43% of them; and had 730 applications for ED II but decisions have not yet been made on them.</p>

<p>I’m pretty sure all Ivies (Columbia, Brown, Dartmouth, Penn, Cornell) have ED except for Yale which has SCEA and Harvard and Princeton, which now have nothing.</p>

<p>

USC has a deadline for scholarship consideration (early December) and then a regular deadline (early January)</p>

<p>I think all of the top 30 US news schools with the exception of Princeton and Harvard have either ED or EA…i’ll throw in a couple off the top of my head…Johns Hopkins is ED, Georgetown is EA, Notre Dame is EA, UNC has EA, Michigan is ROlling so submitting early gets a quicker decision…The list goes on and on check collegeboard.com</p>

<p>Rice has both ED and EA.</p>

<p>Does applying ED give you an advantage large enough have someone choose ED over EA?</p>

<p>I think the difference is that their ED is binding, so those who don’t want to do the binding ED do EA</p>

<p>Chicago indeed has EA, and if you look at the data (and what the admissions officers say) there is no advantage to applying EA, save for finding out sooner and getting preference in dorm selection.</p>

<p>Chicago EA is non-binding and non-restricting (in other words, you can combine it with EA or ED elsewhere)</p>

<p>yes ed heavy advantage, for jhu, nu, cornell, and many other schools, acceptance rate for ed is around 45%</p>

<p>Which top colleges have SCEA?</p>

<p>^ Stanford and Yale, I think.</p>

<p>one question, what does SCEA stand for?</p>

<p>single choice early action, which ony yale and stanford have. means you apply early, its not binding, and can only apply early to one school.</p>