chance me pliiz

so my case is a little odd,
I was an exchange student in Alaska, I was a junior in highschool and I Earned a 3.75 out of 4 GPA and a GED at 16, score: 644 out of 800
9th grade: i was in high school in morocco and GPA is out of 20, and it was 17.2
10th grade also in morocco, GPA: 16.5 out of 20
SAT: 1600 my first time, I’m taking it again in january.

Privileges, and awards:
sponsored by the Us department of state
presidential academic excellence award
I volunteered for 157 hours during my exchange year, and was awarded the state department recognition of outstanding community service certificate

Internships and work experiences:
Language partner with the National security language initiative program aka NSLI-Y
promoted to become the organizer of cultural activities for the NSLI-Y in Morocco
Cultural and community activities organizer for the One World Now Program

Initiative:
started a Youth organization for social change, with refugee foundation , Orient Occident, Amideast and US embassy.

skills:
speak 4 languages, Darija native, Arabic classic 2nd, french 3rd, and English 4th

sports:
Junior varsity volleyball and Tae Kwon do red Belt

my dream universities are Uchicago Amherst and Upenn, also applying for Colby, Oberlin and Kenyon.

Ethnicity: African Amazigh
Financial situation: basically poor living off my father’s retirement
Special circumstances; father passed when I was on exchange.

Note: I have studied pretty well for january Sat and expect to score higher than 1800.

The schools you’re looking at would want an SAT score well above 1800. Preferably 2100+ or 2200+. If January doesn’t live up to expectations, try taking the new SAT, and aim for 1400+ (out of 1600).

I don’t know how your grades are in the context of Morocco’s school system, but the experiences in Alaska and Morocco would make you an interesting applicant to many schools if your grades are good and you can raise that SAT score significantly. You’re looking at several colleges that are essentially lottery tickets, so don’t get your hopes up too much, but if you work hard for the next year or thereabouts you’ll have some good choices. Perhaps not the ones on this list, but options many would love to have nonetheless.

thank you, I understand