Other Wharton Content
Wharton Diaries [rss]
Knowledge@Wharton [rss]
Wharton Journal [rss]
Wharton School Publishing [rss]
Wharton News [rss]
General Resources
AACSB
Association of MBAs
Beyond Grey Pinstripes
Business Week
efmd
FT.com
gradschools.com (Worldwide)
Infozee (study abroad)
mba.com (MBA Pathfinder)
MBA2U (Brussels)
MBAinfo
MBAzone
MBA Advice (blog)
MBA Depot
MBA Jungle
MBA Tour
SICEF (Copenhagen)
StudyLink MBA Worldwide
TOEFL
Top MBA
Vault.com
Wall Street Journal
Contact
Issues related to this blog can sent to adcomblog@wharton.upenn.edu
General admissions questions should be sent to mba.admissions@wharton.upenn.edu
Chats are hosted every other Wednesday at 6 pm EST
The Wharton MBA Waitlist: A Time for Inactivity & Repose
You are on the Wharton waitlist. You feel as though your hands are tied: the policy is to truly wait. Surely there is something that can be done to secure a spot in the class – not. Instead of being stressed over your inability to take action, look at the positive aspects of Wharton’s procedures.
At Wharton, there is no need to:
So what are Wharton’s waitlist policies again? For some reason, waitlist candidates seem to have trouble remembering them. However, here is a copy of the email that was sent to all Round 1 waitlist candidates (please note that the dates will change following our Round 2 decision release):
Dear Waitlist Candidate:
As a waitlist candidate, you may have some questions about the admissions process going forward. Below is some information about waitlist procedures that will be helpful to you: We will retain your name on the waitlist for consideration at the end of the next round unless you request your application be withdrawn. If you would like to withdraw, please e-mail mba.admissions@wharton.upenn.edu, using the subject header: “Waitlist Remove.” All waitlist candidates who do not ask to be removed from the list will be reconsidered for admission in Round 3 and notified of the Admissions Committee decision by 5pm Eastern Standard Time (EST) of the Round 3 decision release date of Thursday, May 17, 2007. Decisions include: admit waitlist, waitlist continue, and deny waitlist. In the spirit of fairness and equity, we will not accept additional materials for inclusion in your application. In this same spirit, we do not offer another interview. There is no point person in the office for the waitlist. All waitlist decisions are handled by the Admissions Committee. Feedback to candidates is not offered to candidates while they are on the waitlist. There is no rank order to the waitlist. The chances of being admitted off the waitlist are not predictable since much depends on the strength of the pool in subsequent rounds. Historically, the admit rate has varied from year to year and has very little correlation with the number of candidates placed on the waitlist.
Thank you in advance for honoring these guidelines. We sincerely appreciate your interest in the Wharton School. 23 Mar 2007 09:50 AM
in
Application Strategy
| Permalink TrackBack URL for this entry: Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The Wharton MBA Waitlist: A Time for Inactivity & Repose: Yes i wish there was a magic formula that we could apply to skip the waiting list but i guess we all need to go through the same process which keeps things fair! Posted by: manchester cosmetic dentistry | Aug 2, 2009 6:27:53 AM
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341dc7b153ef00d83577728869e2
student2student
Chats are hosted every other Wednesday at 6 pm EST
MBA Schools
AGSM (Australia)
Berkeley
Carnegie Mellon
Chicago
Columbia
Cornell-Johnson
Dartmouth-Tuck
Duke-Fuqua
Harvard
IESE (Spain)
IMD (Switzerland)
Insead (France)
London Business School (UK)
Michigan
MIT-Sloan
Kellogg-Northwestern
NYU-Stern
Pennsylvania-Wharton
Queens (Canada)
RSM Erasmus University
Stanford
Texas-McCombs
Toronto (Canada)
UCLA
Virginia-Darden
Yale