<p>Hi, my name is Aubi and I am a Junior and live in Pennsylvania. I am INDIAN and bilingual. I want to become a Anesthesiologist. What are my chances of getting into these schools:
1. University of Pennsylvania [ED-26%]
2. John Hopkins [ED-37%]
3. Penn State University/Thomas Jefferson University: 6 year medical program
4. Duke University [ED-30%]
5. University of Notre Dame [EA-33%]
6. Emory University [ED-38%]
7. Penn State University
8. University of Michigan [EA-40%]</p>
<p>If senior year ended these are scores
GPA Weighted: 4.18
GPA UnWeighted: 3.75
Class Rank: Unaware
My school is ranked top 30 in state</p>
<p>Standardized Tests
-ACT: 32/33
-Math:35 -English:32 -Science:33 -Reading:31
- SAT Subject Test: Math I- 800</p>
<p>Extracurricular Activities (Based on end of Senior year)
-Clarinet (5 years): from 3rd grade to 7th grade
-Media Club (1 year)
-Model UN (2 years)
-Attended Pittsburgh Global Affairs Council Meetings (4 years)
-Mock trial (4 years): witness (2), attorney (3)
-Student Government (3 years): head of class 2 years
-FBLA (3 years): states 2 years
-Local Medicine class at University of Pittsburgh (3 years)
-Future Doctors of America (2 years)
-National Honors Academy (2 years)
-NSHSS (3 years)
-National Honors Society (2 years)
-Helped co-organize a Red Out in cooperation with American Heart Association
-Volunteer hours: 100+</p>
<p>3 letter of recommendations; AP Chem teacher, physician (2)
Also 1st one in the family to attend college in the USA
PLEASE CHANCE ME, WILL CHANCE BACK :)</p>
<ol>
<li>University of Pennsylvania - Reach. Apply ED for a chance, probably out of reach for regular</li>
<li>John Hopkins - Reach</li>
<li>Penn State University/Thomas Jefferson University: 6 year medical program - Match/Reach…I don’t know a lot about medical program</li>
<li>Duke University - Reach. Again, apply ED for a chance!</li>
<li>University of Notre Dame - Low reach</li>
<li>Emory University - Low reach/Match…They have an EDII option which could work if you aren’t accepted to your first ED school</li>
<li>Penn State University - match!</li>
<li>University of Michigan - low reach/match. They like a 3.8 unweighted, but apply EA. You may be deferred but I think you would ultimately get in. </li>
</ol>
<p>Your app is actually pretty good and the only thing I would work on if I were you is to boost up your gpa a bit and take the SAT if you can. If your SAT is on level with your ACT score I would highly recommend sending it in as well.
University of Pennsylvania -Reach
John Hopkins-Low Reach
Penn State University/Thomas Jefferson University: 6 year medical program-I don’t know
<ol>
<li>University of Pennsylvania -Reach</li>
<li>John Hopkins-Low Reach</li>
<li>Penn State University/Thomas Jefferson University: 6 year medical program-Match</li>
<li>Duke University -Reach</li>
<li>University of Notre Dame -Low Reach</li>
<li>Emory University - Low Reach</li>
<li>Penn State University-Match</li>
<li>University of Michigan -Match</li>
</ol>
<p>You’ve got a lot of EC’s, but my question would be how much of a leader are you in each? Anyways, you’re a strong applicant by the looks of it. I imagine it would highly depend on what your school offers.</p>
<p>@shk909: If you recommend EDII at Emory, you might as well just tell them do RD, the chances go down in both with respect to ED1. ED1 is the only one with a significant advantage and weirdly enough, this year, several 32 ACTs and their SAT equivalents did not get into Emory this year and this despite the fact that Emory did not grow it’s application pool overall. However, the number of scholar and ED1 applicants did grow quite a bit (scholars grew dramatically because of the self-nomination policy and most scholar applicants are 34+ types and several of these also gain admission to like HYP). The number of scholarship applicants will make it much harder for “regular” applicants because if any of these apply either ED round, they’ll likely be accepted and steal those spots and then they will steal significant spots from the RD pool as well. I just get a feeling that Emory’s changes to the admissions scheme appears like a way to optimize the caliber of the admitted students without having to increase the application numbers substantially or at all. Kind of how Chicago used to do (having much less apps. than other places, but still getting the same caliber students) before using a scheme that increases its app. numbers, so I would be careful chancing anybody below like a 33 for something outside of ED1 for Emory. It also would be nice if the UW GPA was at least a little higher. If next year is like this year, I’m betting the current stats of MBenz would put Emory at a low reach. </p>
<p>University of Pennsylvania -Reach
2. John Hopkins-Low Reach
3. Penn State University/Thomas Jefferson University: 6 year medical program-low reach
4. Duke University -Reach
5. University of Notre Dame -high match
6. Emory University - Low Reach
7. Penn State University-Match
8. University of Michigan -Match</p>
<p>You really don’t want to go and look to see what type of students were not selected for the scholarship but instead will be sent on to the RD pool to compete with everyone else (there were like 3900 scholarship applicants when there was like 2.5-3k last year and only 75 were selected for a main campus scholarship, and 90 for Oxford, which means the other 3700ish will be forwarded to RD pool unless some applied ED2 which I’m sure a few did). </p>
<p>Since your GPA & ACT scores are quite good & in the range of these schools, I can see you getting accepting into any of them with luck.</p>
<ol>
<li>University of Pennsylvania: reach</li>
<li>John Hopkins: low reach</li>
<li>Penn State University/Thomas Jefferson University: 6 year medical program: high match/low reach</li>
<li>Duke University: low reach</li>
<li>University of Notre Dame: reach</li>
<li>Emory University: low reach</li>
<li>Penn State University: match</li>
<li>University of Michigan: match</li>
</ol>