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What should I do if Harvard University admits REA in advance?
REA is the abbreviation of RestrictiveEarlyAction, which means restrictive early action. It is an early admission method for applying for undergraduate courses in the United States. It is stipulated that students can only apply for one school at the initial stage of application, but they are free to choose whether to join the school after being admitted.

Restrictive Early Admission Action is a special way of early admission (EA for short), which is exclusive and restricts students from applying for early admission to other schools, that is, they can only apply for early admission to one school at the same time, not to other schools, but to regular admission. The admission of REA is optional.

The admission methods of REA are mainly aimed at top universities, such as Harvard University, Yale University, Stanford University and Princeton University.

Extended data:

The admission rate and proportion of early application for undergraduate courses in the United States is much higher than that of conventional application, which shows that schools attach importance to early application.

American university applications are mainly divided into three categories: early application, regular application and rolling admission.

Early application is mainly divided into: early decision-making and early action. Early Decision (ED): A binding method of early application. You can only apply to one school at a time, and you must be admitted. EarlyAction (EA for short): an unbound early application method, which can apply to multiple schools at the same time and be admitted without going.

RegularDecision (RD for short): All universities have RD, and EA/ED schools also have this round of RD.

RollingAdmission: There is no definite deadline for application or admission. As long as all the students' application materials are submitted, the Admissions Office will begin to evaluate the students' applications and inform them of the admission results until they are fully accepted.

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