If this is for an academic degree (MA, MS, PhD), then you may not know for several months. For these programs, a committee of faculty members will get together and review all of the applications together. The process is VERY different from the undergraduate process -- and depends completely on the schedules of a small group of people.
When I applied to PhD programs, I did not hear until late February to late March.
If you are applying to a professional program (JD, MBA, MD), there is a possibility that you could hear earlier if you are accepted -- and later if you are not. These programs usually have hired staff who make most of the decisions.
2007-12-04 02:25:35
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answer #1
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answered by Ranto 7
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So one thank you to faux examine adventure is to volunteer in a examine lab for 2 or 3 hours each week. Its next to no longer something time sensible, yet you are able to positioned on your resume, worked in a lab for 6 months. It completely looks expert and you will learn maximum of what you ought to properly known anyhow so its no huge deal.
2016-10-19 03:04:11
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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It would depend on when your term would start if you are accepted. If school starts in Jan, then you should be finding out very soon, if it starts next Fall you may not hear back until the Spring.
2007-12-04 01:50:59
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answer #3
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answered by justine lauren 3
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Don't they have published application deadlines, and reply dates?
In most US Colleges, they tell you something like "applications are due Jan 1 and we let everyone know by March 15th" or something like that. So people know and make plans. Have you checked the school's web site for those dates?
2007-12-04 01:51:21
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answer #4
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answered by hottotrot1_usa 7
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