Am I Ivy League?

<p>UW GPA 3.93; W GPA 5.02</p>

<p>Top 3% of my class.</p>

<p>Hatian-American,daughter of immigrants</p>

<p>I have taken 7 AP's: Stat, Eng Lang & Comp, World History, Euro History, US History, Psych, French and received A's ranging from 90 -100 in all.
All my non-AP classes are advanced and I am in Academic Decathlon.</p>

<p>Next years course load
AP Lit and Composition
AP Chem
AP Macroeconomics
AP Calc AB
AP Calc BC
AP Govt
Academic Decathlon</p>

<p>SAT (Super score): 2230
750 - W, 740 - R, 740 - M</p>

<p>My recommendations will most likely be really good, but obviously I can never be sure.
However, my guidance counselor nominated me for the city's outstanding student of the month and a teacher that will write one of my recommendations asked me to be president of the club she sponsors</p>

<p>My essays will be good, but I haven't completely decided what I am going to write.</p>

<p>I am a published writer and I am currently writing a novel. I am also a songwriter who performs regularly and I taught myself guitar as well as playing piano, saxophone and singing. I am also a public speaker, I give presentation to my church youth group and organization around my state and school.</p>

<p>Extra Curricular: </p>

<p>Shot Put 4 years (Varsity for 4)
Discus 4 years (JV: 3, V:1)
Journey to Dream (mentor group) - 4 yrs
President - Sophmore-Senior Years
Performer (Acting, Singing, Playing Guitar)
Speaker</p>

<p>I’d say that you’re qualified. Does not mean that you will get in, but it is definitely worth a shot.</p>

<p>“published writer” meaning publishing deal or I independently published it. Writing a novel means nothing as your not guaranteed to finish it. If your a performer and want that to help you, you need credentials about why you are a good performer. You can’t know your essays “will be good” if you haven’t written them yet.</p>

<p>Also, how is your UW GPA a 3.93 but you’ve gotten “and received A’s ranging from 90 -100 in all.”</p>

<p>You can’t take both AB and BC in the same year. This is fake everyone, go home.</p>

<p>@bloodythunder My school lets students take AB in the fall and BC in the spring. We have almost no all year classes, so we can have more flexible schedules.</p>

<p>@nac93420 He means that the exam is scheduled on the same day at the same time, so it’s impossible to take both in the same year</p>

<p>@bloodythunder‌ At least at my school, an A- is a 90-92 percent. An A- is a 3.7.
<a href=“How to Convert (Calculate) Your GPA to a 4.0 Scale – BigFuture”>College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools;
Hope that helps.</p>

<p>Also, some schools have AB as a prerequisite for BC. Then their BC would just cover Calc 2. I’m guessing this person’s school has a block schedule, since there aren’t year-long courses. You are correct in that you can’t take both exams in one year, though! I’m assuming the OP would just take the BC exam.</p>

<p>What are the details about your novel/published works?</p>

<p>@Gatortristan‌ @nac93420‌ with regard to both exams, I took AB and BC in the same year and simply took the AP BC test and received an AB subscore</p>

<p>Absolutely!</p>

<p>Ekselan travay! Yes, you are. </p>

<p>Note that even you will get a subcore for AB in the BC AP exam, colleges may not use that subscore for credit. Nevertheless, if you take Calc BC, you are more likely to get more credit than Calc AB as the curve is more generous that far over half of the students get 4 or 5 in BC.</p>