<p>2240 satI
710 chem satII
740 mathIIC
98 gpa
indian
all hardest classes (ap world, ap euro, ap languag eand comp, ap psych, ap physics, ap us, ap lit, ap chem, ap bio, ap macro, ap gov, ap calc + honors for reset of classes)</p>
<p>-siemens semifinalist, independent lab research for four years, first place at various local science fairs, 2 grants recieved for research, long island leadership in science award
-clinical research - three papers published in medical journals
-shadowed physician, 400+ hours of volunteer work
-accreditation manager - attained national accreditation for urogynecology fellowship at Mount Sinai hospital
-started a fundraiser which provides life saving surgeries for three children since freshmen year in high school ($15,000 raised per year 60k in all)
-president of largest club in school + of chorale
-various speech and debate awards
really good recs and essays</p>
<p>what ar emy chances at med programs like PLME (ED), bu, rice/baylor, northwestern, + ivies?</p>
<p>Yes to all except Baylor medical, Rice medical, Harvard and Princeton (like CNI said, you have only two SAT IIs--and Harvard requires three--and Princeton does also) and I also have doubts about Yale, even though they only require two SAT IIs.</p>
<p>Your Intel semifinalist status and GPA are the "huge" items here. The SAT Is are just okay, but the ECs should outweigh this at most of the schools.</p>
<p>I think that your experience in working with doctors and in doing research will outweigh the slightly less than stellar SAT scores at some of these schools. Brown in particular is known for looking at the ECs and experience and considering the interview and essays much more than class rank or SAT scores in determining who gets in to PLME. Northwestern and Rice are much the same--whereas I think Baylor's medical program will look at the SATs much more.</p>
<p>So, in summary:</p>
<p>Brown PLME (ED)--Yes
Northwestern HPME--Yes
Baylor medical--No
BU (7 years)--Yes
Rice medical--Yes
Harvard--No
Yale--50-50, but a probable no, but barely--you are close here and may possibly get in.
Princeton--No</p>
<p>P.S. Nothing like choosing the toughest programs possible--700s in all the tests would be good enough at 99%+ of all schools, but possibly not good enough at Yale and Baylor medical. (Harvard and Princeton are not considered since you didn't take the 3rd required SAT II test).</p>
<p>im not exactly sure but i say you at least get interviewed for rice/baylor and hpme. probably in at plme because you have some nice medical ec's. good chances overall</p>