Rambot4571
New Member
- Joined
- May 14, 2016
- Messages
- 7
Hi! I was wondering if I could apply E.D. to a civilian college and break the contract if I got an appointment to USNA?
Hi! I was wondering if I could apply E.D. to a civilian college and break the contract if I got an appointment to USNA?
Yes and No. The ED agreement is not legally binding (they can't get a court order making you attend or pay), but is very risky to break without cause.Hi! I was wondering if I could apply E.D. to a civilian college and break the contract if I got an appointment to USNA?
Of course! You applied to USNA first.
I would never worry about the Educational Cartel, they already have the NCAA.
They are not going after you. EVER.
Especially, after you tell them you decided to serve at a school that has no snowflake zones, like USNA, USCGA, USMA, USAFA and that other one.
IMHO, this is still America, last time I check. You are paying them for future "services", remember? If you take no services, you owe them NOTHING. They already got the application fee you paid.
If that school isn't truly your first choice, then don't apply ED, just apply EA or regular decision.
if you do EA and back out,
I don't get it. It seems like the majority is for not breaking EA commitment. However, a majority opinion on making deposit to plan B school in case something happens summer training is okay?
Disclaimer, I didn't cross reference with the plan b deposit tread.
I don't get it. It seems like the majority is for not breaking EA commitment. However, a majority opinion on making deposit to plan B school in case something happens summer training is okay?
Disclaimer, I didn't cross reference with the plan b deposit tread.
I think you meant to say "Early Decision ", the binding one, Hoops!
There is no commitment involved with EA, only ED.
My understanding with the Plan B Deposit issue is that you make your intentions known and give notice to the school that it is Plan B school. That way everyone is on the same sheet of music.
EA or ED, whatever commits a student to that college.