<p>Hello I’m a rising senior and i was hoping if you could chance me for Brown RD</p>
<p>Gender: Male
Race: Hispanic YAAAAA!!
Intended major: neuroscience/ molecular bio</p>
<p>Class Rank: Top 1%</p>
<p>Testing:
SAT: Math-790 Verbal-720 writing-760 (2270 total)
SatIIs: Bio M: 800 MathII:790
AP exams: Bio-5 World-5 Calc AB-5 Stats-5 US History-5 Eng. Lang-4 Physics B-4</p>
<p>Awards:
Science:
-1st place in cell and molecular bio at ISEF from the Air Force (2012)
-Best in Fair Grand award at Florida State science fair (2012)
-1st place-biochemistry at states science fair (2012)
-2nd place at Florida Junior academy of science state competition
-Paper being reviewed for Cell
-USABO semifinalist (open score :35)
-2nd place at district brain bee</p>
<p>Math:
5th place in Statisitics at State convention
Various Mu Alpha theta district awards
AIME finalist (Score:5)</p>
<p>EC:
President and founder of Chinese CLub and Chinese Honor Society
President of Science research club
Marching band- saxophone section leader
-Doing research in Molecular developmental neuroscience during the summer and neuronal regeneration during the school year</p>
<p>Community service:
~800 hours in 3 years
Raised over $1000 for an elderly home in rural Colombia, volunteered at the home, and helped provide medical aid for the homeless senior citizens.</p>
<p>any tips/advice would be appreciated…thanks!</p>
<p>My advice?
Write about how you founded the Chinese Club. Brown looooooves kids who make things. I would know, I’m Brown class of 2016 and I started a club too. The awesome thing, I think, about the Brown application is the addition of the unique essays on the supplement. They are questions that you really have to think about. If the supplement is similar(which it most likely will be) you will have the perfect platform to write about it. They actually read those essays. Your SATs are fine. You’re obviously smart, that goes without saying. Make sure ou demonstrate why you are different and an asset to Brown.
Good luck!</p>
<p>1) I think it is absolutely ridiculous that some people are giving out percentages for your chance to make their evaluations seem more credible.</p>
<p>2) Very strong app. You better have killer essays. I really hope you started them in the beginning of the summer or earlier. Don’t skimp on the supplements, or you will appear to be an “ivy plus” mass applicant who applies to twenty schools.</p>
<p>3) You appear very academic. Which isn’t always a good thing. Try your best to show admissions how you aren’t going to be cooped up in a library for four years.</p>
<p>Are you an interesting person who has “a life”? Are people in college going to want to talk to you? Or are you just a dull person with an extensive list of accomplishments?</p>