Chance me and i'll chance back (CHANCE AS TRANSFER)

<p>PLEASE CONSIDER I'M APPLYING AS A TRANSFER
Major? International Affairs
Current University: Small Liberal Arts College in Virginia
H.S G.P.A: 3.0
SAT: 1680/2400 (i know, really crappy)
College GPA: 3.7 (I will be applying after completing my freshmen and sophomore year, so i can get in as a junior)
Extra Curricular : Secretary in one club, and then member of 2 others. Have been in Model UN Conferences, and I really do have more E.C and have been a volunteer for countless hours...(300-400). Volunteered with an organization partnering with the State Dept. for 2 years
Reccs: Georgetown alumni who's a professor at my university.</p>

<p>Hispanic, living in the US for 5 years.
Please chance these: </p>

<p>U.Va, GWU, Georgetown University, UCLA, USC (Southern California), American University, NYU,...I'll be applying to their International Realtions program. Also, give me some colleges that I could have a chance at...(but first chance me in these please)</p>

<p>I dont know how much schools weight SAT’s when transferring for junior year. Your college GPA seems good enough for any of those schools (maybe Georgetown/UCLA as reaches), but a 1680, for freshman admission, is not anywhere close enough for any of those schools. Georgetown looks for ~2200, and UCLA ~2100. The rest are a little lower but not much. Try and bring it up to a 1900+ if you can, and if you find it relevant.</p>

<p>I too don’t know the significance of the SAT for transfer students. However, all your ec’s and gpa looks great. You have a very good chance at American U. and GWU, and probably also UVA since you’re a state resident. If you plan on transfering to another school’s International Relations you should check out Tufts.</p>

<p>I’m curious, what small liberal arts college? Emory & Henry? Lynchburg? </p>

<p>GWU, American University- I think these would be yeses. Not safeties, just good chances.
UVA, Georgetown University, NYU- These are matches, but slightly less likely.
UCLA, USC (Southern California)- These are more doubtful because they accept mainly in-state students and have high rates of returning students (ie, not many spots for transfers). For USC, you have an okay chance, though.</p>

<p>Good luck!</p>