<p>ECs: Cricket captain (6 years club, 2 years international); 1st place regionally. 2nd place internationally
Basketball (4 years); 1st place regionally, 3rd place in an international tournament
Website Designing (since middle school); have designed 3 pretty well-known websites
MUN (4 years); president of economic & social commission, ambassador
INJAZ (Small business competition); president and financial director of company
Amnesty international (2 years); vice president and activities director
NHS (2 years); member and head of tutoring</p>
<p>I have applied to:
Yale
Princeton
Columbia
UPenn
Dartmouth
Brown
WUSTL
Amherst
Williams
Claremont McKenna</p>
<p>[just in case you were wondering, my safeties are in Canada :) ]</p>
<p>oh and i will be applying for financial aid
the only ones that should matter for are Brown, WUSTL, and Claremont McKenna (since the rest are need-blind for internationals/canadians)</p>
<p>Your ECs flow together and match your AP scores in econ. I’d say you fit the model to be an excellent business major and they’ll all most probably accept you. How were your personal statements?</p>
<p>I think that it’s not wise to apply to so many Ivies, which are not only reaches for everyone, but complete crapshoot even for the most qualified applicants. Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.</p>
<p>Yale- pretty good match
Princeton- i would say ACT should be a little higher but you might be pretty good match
Columbia- match
UPenn- in
Dartmouth- in
Brown- in
WUSTL- in
Amherst- in
Williams- in
Claremont McKenna- in</p>
<p>I think you’ll get into Amherst, WUSTL, and Clermont. However, for the others, it is a big toss up. My dad used to work for admissions at UM, and he told me that the Ivys (especially Harvard) get so many applications from perfect students that it is really completely random who gets into there. </p>
<p>I’m not one who likes the automatic “high reach” dished out to people who ask for chances to Ivies no matter the strength of the applicant, but I think it needs to be made clear here:</p>