<p>I have a 3.6 GPA at a community college in Texas.
I'm a looking for a major in either history, philosophy, or political science.
I have 60 credit hours and my worst grade I made was a D in college algebra.
After that awful grade I took statistics instead because I will ultimately need it for political science and got an A. That will transfer as my math credit so I won't need to take anymore math classes to graduate.
I have made all A's in my history classes, philosophy classes, and government classes.
It would be helpful if I was given multiple options...
I am already considering TCU and University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M....
Where else should I apply?!</p>
<p>What about Texas State?</p>
<p>That is a party school:/</p>
<p>And my gpa went up to a 3.8</p>
<p>All schools are party schools.</p>
<p>LOL Erin.</p>
<p>Seriously Josh, for a liberal arts/social science program that you’re looking for, you’ll probably have a bounty of options at your public universities in Texas. So pick a school where you believe you will thrive all around in the campus life and environment. My guess is that A&M and Austin are fine in History etc. But both those places can be hard to be admitted to. So aim for a school that strongly wants your type of applicant. I’ve heard good things about UTexas-Arlington, though kids from Austin knock it, probably without good reason. Texas Tech and U of Houston are also two underrated schools.</p>
<p>As for privates, investigate to determine if you would get decent aid from Rice, TCU or Trinity in San Antonio. Food for thought; LSU and U of Alabama are attracting Texas kids by offering generous financial aid, if that’s important to you.</p>
<p>Forgot to mention the U of Dallas, a Catholic school that has a reputation for hard classes, which is a good thing.</p>