<p>High school gpa: 3.25</p>
<p>Honors from 9-10
Honors Biology
Honors Algebra
Honors English
AP Spanish</p>
<p>11
Only AP Spanish was available and i took it</p>
<p>Upcoming senior year AP's
AP Economics
AP Calculus
AP English
AP Physics
AP Chemistry</p>
<p>SAT I
Math: 560
CR: 480
Writing: 470</p>
<p>I know its bad take in mind that english is not my first language and i really didnt prepare for it, now i bought the collegeboard 1000 page book and im really studying think im going to do much better</p>
<p>Extracurriculars
Basketball Team
Student Council Treasurer
Model United Nations
Mu Alpha Theta</p>
<p>Please be honest thanks, i dont need financial aid i will pay all, and im also a urm so that might help also, thanks</p>
<p>At this point, you would be more or less competitive for Oxford (which guarantees a spot at Emory if you keep the appropriate GPA) than Emory. If you get a mid-high 1200 (though at least 1300 is recommended, trust me, I’m an African American and was worried that I wouldn’t get in with almost a 1400, which is way beyond average considering my school and school district really sucks compared to my Emory peers) on your SAT and perhaps increase your GPA, you may have a chance at “early decision” Emory (Atlanta campus), as your chances for regular decision (what I applied) go down even if you fall into the published middle-50 percentile statistics. So if you are able to drastically improve your SAT, do early decision and cross every part of your body that can be crossed lol. </p>
<p>Yeah, but honestly, you probably don’t have a prayer even at Early Decision yet. You may have one at Oxford though, I dunno.</p>
<p>Though your senior schedule is tough, your GPA can increase. Mine increased dramatically (unweighted GPA that is, I did far better in AP than my honors courses because it was more intellectually stimulating I guess) when I entered AP in junior year, and I took the same amount as you in my senior year (the most in my school that year. I took AP bio, chem, euro, calc A/B, and Lit, did solidly on the exams too, only one 3)</p>
<p>Take my analysis with a grain of salt though. I’d wait for one of the more experienced members on this site to comment. They may be able to provide a more sufficient analysis and perhaps some advice.</p>