Chance me! (very curious)

<p>With these stats: </p>

<p>2300 SAT (770m 730cr 800w)
3.9uw GPA (10 AP classes/ Rest Honors + 2 or 3 Regular)
Top 2~3% of Class of 750
Decent ECs (4 clubs - all 4 years - some regional awards in a club - President of a club)
[well I think so]
500 hours of community service (presidential service award)</p>

<p>Chance me at these schools (can someone explain that match, high match, reach thing?)</p>

<p>Northwestern (ED)
Cornell
UChicago
UPenn
UC Berkeley</p>

<p>You’re good for all of those schools. I’d say you’ll get into at least 2 of your non-ED schools. You have a very good chance of getting into Northwestern ED anyways.</p>

<p>A match is when your stats are on par with the school in general or a specific program. For instance, UC Berkeley would be a match for you.</p>

<p>High match is when your stats are still on par but edging towards the lower end when it starts to get more competitive. It’s in between reach and match.</p>

<p>A reach school is supposedly one that’s hard to get into with your stats and it’s a situation in which your admission or rejection is hard to predict.</p>

<p>Basically, you can expect to get into match/high match schools but start to expect a few rejections from reach schools.</p>

<p>Northwestern (ED) - high match/ low reach
Cornell - reach
UChicago - low reach
UPenn - reach
UC Berkeley - match</p>

<p>Thanks! Anyone else want to chance me I never knew I would have chances at some of the colleges. I also have a passion for my community and economics, I am confident that colleges will know that!</p>

<p>What state are you in?</p>

<p>I think you’ll get accepted to Berkeley if you’re OOS cause they’ll consider you a full-pay student.</p>

<p>If you’re from the NE, then your chances are good but not high because many apps come from the NE.</p>

<p>Are you an ORM?</p>

<p>ORM (asian), Arizona. Very large public school (3000+). Sends people to good schools (Last year I think 2 MIT, 1 Princeton, 1 Harvard, 6 JHU, 2 Cornell, 2 Stanford + I already know someone who was recently accepted Stanford)</p>