Chance me for 18 schools.

<p>-Small private school in CA
-Asian
-Female</p>

<p>-3.68 GPA (Huge upward trend)
-2160 SAT (630R/790W/750M)
-Taken 5 APs (school offers nine, including Spanish, Chinese, things that I don't have the option to take.)
French: 4
World: 4
Lit: 3 (not in an AP lit class)
Euro:
Stats: </p>

<p>Our school has not awards/honors. </p>

<p>Recs: I read one (from AP euro and AP world teacher) and it was AMAZING.
The other was from my precalc and AP stats teacher, i think it'll be good.
I knew my counselor very well so I think hers will be good too. </p>

<p>ECs:
-4 years of varsity soccer
-4 years of varsity tennis
-ran a benefit show for the darcie genocide and raised $5000
-went on an international conference to India as a delegate of our school
-led a regional conference held at our school.
-student leader for a sophomore community service group.
-3 years of yearbook, editor in chief senior year.
-3 years of Asian club, vice president this year.
-interned at Korea Unversity at their english magazine. </p>

<p>Sat2s
French 660
Math 2 740
Korean 790</p>

<p>Thanks!!</p>

<p>Schools
BC
BU
CMU
Colgate
Hamilton
Emory
Vandy
Cornell
JHU
Brown
Oxy
Syracuse
Wake Forest
Smith
USC
Brandeis
Case Western
Rochester</p>

<p>TOP CHOICES: Vanderbilt, USC, Emory, Wake Forest, and Carnegie Mellon</p>

<p>For Vanderbilt, I did ED2, and had an active alum/donor write me an extra rec.
For USC, I did the interview, visited campus, and went to an information reception. I talked to the rep for my area multiple times.</p>

<p>You will be accepted. Congrats.</p>

<p>From what I know about those schools, you shouldn’t have too much of a problem getting accepted to any of them.
Looks like your application fees are going to surpass your tuition though o.o</p>

<p>To sirgerbill</p>

<p>Haha yeah my application fees were a lot… Oh well haha </p>

<p>:)</p>

<p>Like others said, those schools are mostly matches. You shouldn’t have problems getting in most of them.</p>

<p>That list sizes 3 times bigger than mine lol</p>

<p>Despite your academic achievements, where you’re lacking is your decisionmaking skills. Really? you couldn’t narrow the list of 18 down to under ten?</p>