<p>Curious to see if it was possible and which UCs are students with those stats get into asides from riverside and Merced :)</p>
<p>Maybe Santa Cruz? I have a 3.4 but a high SAT score. When I visited UCSC though, their brochure said the average SAT score was a 1750 or something</p>
<p>Do they only consider sat scores in one sitting? Or are they going to consider the highest scores?</p>
<p>one setting, no superscore</p>
<p>i got into ucsd with like a 1580 sat only took it once, should have taken it another time. My gpa was like 3.5 un weighted but my uc gpa was 4.1</p>
<p>I got into Santa Cruz. My non-UC gpa is around a 3.6-7 and my Sat was in the 1600s range. Got rejected from SD and LA, but kinda expected it. </p>
<p>I’m waiting on the others! It’s so nerve-wracking!</p>
<p>well i got into all the uc that i applied to and my sat score was basically a 1700 but i do have like a 3.8 unweighted gpa</p>
<p>Frankly the UCs are more GPA oritentaed.
A 1900 SAT is not good enough for most first tier schools, but in combination of a 4.2+ UC GPA (which is not that hard), it can get you into SD and possibly LA and Cal.</p>
<p>1700 SAT is…not good for most cases, but with a 4.2+ UC GPA, SD and Irvine are solid matches.</p>
<p>congrats to those who got in.
i’m appealing UCSC and UCSB because i really want to get into those schools.
in one sitting, my best sat score is only 1650(i know its really low) but combined (cause i took it twice) it would be 1750. for some reason i decreased in writing the second time around. i got into UCR and UCM tho. so at least i have a back up if my appeals dont work.</p>
<p>thanks guys! :)</p>
<p>I would have to disagree with your statement that a score of an
“1700 SAT is…not good for most cases, but with a 4.2+ UC GPA, SD and Irvine are solid matches.” UC’s may have a formula to measure performance. However, the personal statements are the greatest attributes. Test scores and GPA alone cannot define a person. While schools may look for students who have high test scores and GPA to guarantee retention and excellence in academic performance, the key points and objectives come down to the face of a person–personal statements.</p>