Can you bluff or play a poker game with scholarship offers, or are these offers made public at least between schools?
This is not an ethical question but a technical one.
ETA: schools might require proof?
Do Schools Know Your Other $$ Offers? Forum
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Re: Do Schools Know Your Other $$ Offers?
They will most likely ask for a copy of the award letter or a screenshot of it
- Mullens
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Re: Do Schools Know Your Other $$ Offers?
This is an ethical question and a technical one. It is a technical question that has nothing but ethical implications. Schools do not know offers but they will require proof (in the form of a scholarship letter) to consider other scholarships. You gain nothing from bluffing other than the risk of pissing off admissions officers.conker wrote:Can you bluff or play a poker game with scholarship offers, or are these offers made public at least between schools?
This is not an ethical question but a technical one.
ETA: schools might require proof?
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Re: Do Schools Know Your Other $$ Offers?
Mullens wrote:This is an ethical question and a technical one. It is a technical question that has nothing but ethical implications. Schools do not know offers but they will require proof (in the form of a scholarship letter) to consider other scholarships. You gain nothing fromconker wrote:Can you bluff or play a poker game with scholarship offers, or are these offers made public at least between schools?
This is not an ethical question but a technical one.
ETA: schools might require proof?bluffinglying other than the risk of pissing off admissions officers.
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Re: Do Schools Know Your Other $$ Offers?
Got ya. Thanks.carsondalywashere wrote:They will most likely ask for a copy of the award letter or a screenshot of it
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Re: Do Schools Know Your Other $$ Offers?
I strictly limited to the technical part (see OP). Thanks for the extra bit, but you missed the scope.Mullens wrote:This is an ethical question and a technical one. It is a technical question that has nothing but ethical implications. Schools do not know offers but they will require proof (in the form of a scholarship letter) to consider other scholarships. You gain nothing from bluffing other than the risk of pissing off admissions officers.conker wrote:Can you bluff or play a poker game with scholarship offers, or are these offers made public at least between schools?
This is not an ethical question but a technical one.
ETA: schools might require proof?
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