Waiting list

<p>So UCLA is using the waiting list system this year for freshmen applicants. What would this mean for students that received the supplement? are we just going to be thrown of the waiting list if they decided to accept us?</p>

<p>i think you get thrown in the waiting list.</p>

<p>stop trolling me curly -____-</p>

<p>^ Lol.</p>

<p>I don’t think everyone who got the supplemental will necessarily be put onto the waitlist. However, I feel like a majority might if UCLA does not reject them first.</p>

<p>that’s what I’m worried about since UCLA makes decisions about the kids that got supplements after the initial definitely accepted and definitely rejected decisions.
I got my supplement late January and turned it in on February 6th. This news about the wait list is news that came out in march, so I’m hoping that my decision was made before the wait list decision</p>

<p>I hope so too. I also got my supplement in late January, on January 30th to be exact. I guess we’ll just have to wait to find out! Good luck!</p>

<p>What AlexLadines said.</p>

<p>not you too, Francis ):
you guys love trolling me that much?</p>

<p>Oh no i got a supplement too. Cant we get accepted!!!</p>

<p>I hope we can, I know that January 30 was one of the earlier dates that supplements were sent out, so i’m hoping our (people that received supplements that were sent out on jan 30) decisions were made before this waitlist decision.</p>

<p>I got my supplement on jan 30</p>

<p>Out of curiosity, when did @johnvstheworld and @newyorkmydreams submit your application? I submitted it on Nov 2nd. Maybe there’s a connection to who gets the supplemental earlier?</p>

<p>A couple days before it was due.</p>

<p>Does anyone know how people who get supplements are evaluated by admissions? Thank you^</p>

<p>@iequalstudent I submitted my application on november 30th.
@newyorkdreams people that get supplements are basically evaluated normally, but fall into a grouping that lies in between definitely in and definitely not in, so the border called “maybe in”. the supplement can either nudge us toward the accepted section, or the rejected section.</p>

<p>omg guys “When campuses send admission and deny letters, campuses using waitlists will invite a subset of their denied freshman applicants — those who came closest to being admitted in the campus’s comprehensive review process — to indicate their interest in being on a waitlist.”</p>

<p>i’m sure that this still applies </p>

<p><a href=“http://www.ucop.edu/newsroom/newswire/img/12/12445096214b9007e0ce00d.pdf[/url]”>http://www.ucop.edu/newsroom/newswire/img/12/12445096214b9007e0ce00d.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>I got supplement like two weeks or a week and a couple of days before the due date. I submittied my application a little after Thanksgiving.</p>

<p>The link posted by jonvstheworld states that UCLA and UC Mercedes don’t use a waitlist. Is there any indication that this has changed?</p>

<p>That link i posted states how the wait list system is used, ucla is using it this year</p>

<p>Getting a supplement is better than getting rejected. I mean at least you know you’re not automatically rejected without second thought. ;O</p>