- Likely letters are sent by several selective schools to a very few applicants most of whom are athletes.
- The vast majority of applicants—even some of the very strongest—will never get a likely letter.
- Likely letters are not offers of admission, so don’t be lulled into bad behavior or a slip in grades.
- Getting a likely letter should not necessarily be interpreted to mean automatic scholarship dollars or admission to exclusive programs like honors colleges.
- Lucky recipients of likely letters are under no obligation to respond.
- Colleges will never tell you who got one or why, so don’t bother to ask.
Bottom line? As Dean J says, “Do not read into the absence of a letter.”
It means something to those who get them but little to those who don’t.
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