<p>assuming a 2250, 94 gpa, rigourous course load and decent ecs and a rank of 9/120 even though that is not shown to colleges on the transcript.(Gpa is unweighted)</p>
<p>Clarify decent EC’s? If I assume this:</p>
<p>2250 SAT
94 GPA (Unweighted)
5 AP classes
Secretary of NHS
JV Tennis
50 hours of volunteering per year</p>
<p>I’d say it’s not likely for even RD.</p>
<p>10 ap classes (2 summer college courses at harvard) varsity hockey (goalie), soccer, chess team, math team, robotics club, science olympiad, 50 hours of volunteering per year including tutoring kids in school.</p>
<p>I change my answer to stretch. How good is your varsity hockey team?</p>
<p>playoffs in our league nothing too crazy though</p>
<p>Hmm yeah it’s gonna be a stretch, but within reach. It’s probably best to think of some other safer schools.</p>
<p>even with ed? what about with a 2300?</p>
<p>not a single piece of information besides SAT and GPA was seen that day.</p>
<p>I think you have a better chance than these guys are giving you. Cornell has a 33% ED acceptance rate compared to 14.5% RD. A 94 unweighted GPA, 2250 SAT, decent number of community service hours, and varsity sports definitely shouldn’t keep you out of the running. </p>
<p>Put more simply, if you write good essays and maybe email a few admissions counselors with questions (to establish a reputation), I don’t see you having any better/worse a shot than any other competitive applicants.</p>
<p>Where I got my stats:
[Ivy</a> League Statistics | Ivy League Admissions Statistics](<a href=“http://theivycoach.com/ivy-league-admissions-statistics/]Ivy”>Ivy League Acceptance Rates and Admissions Statistics | Ivy Coach)</p>