<p>Chance me for Electrical Engineering
International applicant from India
SAT: 1910
Maths: 700. CR:580. WR: 630
Subject tests: Math level 2C: 720, Chemistry: 680, Math 1: 730</p>
<p>Class 9th Grades
Math: A
Science: A
English: B+
Social Science: A
Third Language: C</p>
<p>Class 10th Grades
Math: A
Science: A
English: A
Social Science: A
Third Language: C</p>
<p>Have the highest rigor of curriculum in India.</p>
<p>Clas 11th (screwed up)
Physics: B
Math: A
Chemistry: C+
English C+
Biology: C+</p>
<p>Class 12th (aced it)</p>
<p>Chem: A+
Physics: A
Bio: B+
English: A+
Maths: A</p>
<p>Predicted Grades for the Board Exams (centrally conducted in India)</p>
<p>USC is not a low reach, I have a friend who got rejected from USC after having a 3.8 to a 4.0 all through highschool, with a 2000 on his SAT and 800, 790 and 780 on his subject SATs.</p>
<p>It’s a high reach for you. But, Umass Amherst are BU kinda safeties.</p>
<p>USC: Reach
Wesleyan University (ED2) for Mathematics: Reach
UNC: Reach (it’s about as hard to get into as USC for out-of-staters)
UWI: Match
UVA: Reach
U Mich: Reach
BU: Match
GWU: High match
U Mass, Amherst: Safety</p>
<p>Oh, USC seems to be a high match @texaspg. Yeahhh, I have already applied. Also got an acceptance package from UMass Amherst with a Chancellor’s scholarship :D.</p>
<p>Statistically the same can be said for Michigan, Virginia and North Carolina. Additionally, as an international student you are unlikely to receive any financial aid from those schools if your are admitted.</p>
<p>These grades are given from CBSE ( I am studying in an Indian School), which is completely different from US education, and is a lot more hard. So my grades can’t be converted to GPA</p>