<p>Chance me for Cornell, Berkeley, uPenn, Stanford and Harvard- Thanks a ton to those who do!! I will try to chance back!</p>
<p>My Stats:</p>
<p>SAT: 2190 - CR 730 - M 770 - W 690
Sat Subjects: Bio 800 - Chem 740
GPA: 3.96 - unsure of weighted though of my seven gr. 12 courses 5 are AP's (most able to be taken at my school)
Rank: 1-3/350 (unsure of exact)
APs: 5 on both economics, 5 on biology, taking chem, physics and chem (likely to get 5's again)</p>
<p>Academic Awards:
Top 250 in International Biology Competition
Some 'Distinction' Awards in Math Competitions
Duke of Ed. Bronze and Silver
School Science Award
School Honors (85%+ average)</p>
<p>EC's:
Competitive Lightweight Rowing (multiple leadership, MVP, and competition awards) - rowing is very time consuming, 14+ hours a week on top of school for training
Volunteering for play lighting (over 100 hours, won 4 awards from this)
Track & Field: (three years of competitive track)
Music: Over 12 years of instruments (guitar, piano and trumpet) and I create my own music
Will have 6-8 months of full-time work experience as I am finishing school early (did courses ahead of time/accelerated pace of schooling)
Involvement in some other small groups (not worth mentioning)</p>
<p>If you are getting recruited for rowing you could easily get into any of those. Depends on your erg times. Otherwise if recruiting is not there I would say you have a moderate chance for all but Stanford and Harvard.</p>
<p>I agree with NuiNui. You don’t have very competitive scores but the SAT II’s and science/math awards will help, along with your class rank. The 690 Writing could potentially hurt you.</p>
<p>If you’re not being recruited, I would say you have very slim odds at Harvard and Stanford.</p>
<p>I hate to give these chances, but honestly you’ve only listed super high tier colleges. You should stick in a safety (which in your case would not even have to be a bad school).
Anyways here’s what I think.
Cornell: Mid reach
Brekley: Low reach/high match
UPenn: Mid-High reach
Stanford: High reach
Harvard: High reach</p>