Quest Bridge - QuestBridge Regular Decision

QuestBridge Regular Decision

Finalists who applied to the National College Match, but did not rank schools, and finalists who ranked schools, but did not receive a binding College Match Scholarship, are eligible to apply through QuestBridge Regular Decision. The biggest benefit of the process is free applications to all 35 partner colleges and the opportunity to forward the Questbridge Application in lieu of the Common Application for some schools.

Students have until mid December to check off all the schools they would like QuestBridge to forward their applications to. They must submit all particular application requirements for the colleges they are interested in (listed on QuestBridge's website) by the colleges' regular decision deadline.

Several partner colleges allow students to apply to their binding Early Decision processes; these include Amherst, Bowdoin, Carleton, Davidson, Emory, Grinnell, Northwestern, Oberlin, Pomona, Rice, Scripps, Swarthmore, Trinity, Tufts, Vassar, Washington and Lee, Wesleyan, and Williams. Students who ranked the University of Chicago, University of Virginia, or MIT, and were not matched to a binding school, will receive a non-binding Early Action admissions decision.

Read more about this topic:  Quest Bridge

Famous quotes containing the words regular and/or decision:

    While you’re playing cards with a regular guy or having a bite to eat with him, he seems a peaceable, good-humoured and not entirely dense person. But just begin a conversation with him about something inedible, politics or science, for instance, and he ends up in a deadend or starts in on such an obtuse and base philosophy that you can only wave your hand and leave.
    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860–1904)

    The impulse to perfection cannot exist where the definition of perfection is the arbitrary decision of authority. That which is born in loneliness and from the heart cannot be defended against the judgment of a committee of sycophants. The volatile essences which make literature cannot survive the clichés of a long series of story conferences.
    Raymond Chandler (1888–1959)