@samkr14 april 1st
@thianos I submitted mine on April 3rd and it seems like those who submitted it earlier had higher chances of getting an acceptance according to @UCLAParent123
Yeah It’s likely that they have read all the appeals given the deadline of April 15. Maybe they even decided possible admits if there are enough spaces left.
I’m very pessimistic given the nature of how appeals usually turn out. I wouldn’t be surprised if I receive a rejection any time soon.
@UCLAParent123 YES!!! I’d be down to dorm if we got in!! Triple w @samkr14 ???
@bryanngocpham YES I WOULD LOVE TO
hey guys don’t forget me:) but tbh chance is very slim, even with the COVID.
@samkr14 YAY IM MANIFESTING THISSSS
@Hopeful2024er how do you think chances are slim? UCLA needs more people now because they got a lot less admits (who SIR’d) compared to previous years
The waitlist this year seems to be much larger than that of last year. So we’ll have to see how enrollment is affected and each major has a cap on the number of people accepted so that will probably affect our appeals as well.
@Light732 the waitlists can also be OOS applicants too…i feel like they probably will most likely going to end up going to a different school rather than UCLA…I highly doubt it would effect appeal decisions
Guys, I love you and all and am glad of how determined you are, but please… please don’t get too hopeful. I’d hate to see all of us get too optimistic only to be met with the feared words “I’m sorry.” Hope for the best, but prepare for the worst.
Yeah we really should not be this excited. But i still have hopes 
@UCLAParent123 It seems like the waves are released around 7-10 am in the morning. (one a day)>
bruh watch us all get denied tomorrow morning haha.
Do you guys know if the rejection waves so far are IS or OOS?
Mix of both so far
Good luck to all of you! I know you guys will be successful in the end!
@UCLAParent123 Out of curiosity, what did you write your statement about
I have a feeling that OOS will be more favorable compared to IS. Just my thoughts since the supply for IS greatly exceeds the demand, while for OOS, it’s the opposite.