<p>I'm currently a sophomore so I know I've time before college but here's my stats so far.....</p>
<p>9th Grade:
3.8 UW GPA
Fashion
Advanced Earth Science
English
Spanish 3/4
Algebra CD
Tennis</p>
<p>10th Grade:
(The first semester just ended so this is from the first semester)
4.0 UW GPA
Spanish 5/6
Geometry
Biology
World History
English 5/6
Tennis</p>
<p>11th Grade: (schedule)
AP US History
AP Art History
Chemistry
Spanish 7/8
English Honors
Algebra 3-4 (w/trig?)
Tennis </p>
<p>12th Grade: (Schedule)
AP Government/AP Economics
AP English Lit
AP Spanish
Trig. (might be PreCalulus)
Psychology (maybe)
Tennis</p>
<p>*****haven't taken SAT..etc yet</p>
<p>ECs:
Habitat for Humanity
Fashion of the Arts Certificate of Competency
Scholar Athlete
Honor Roll
Volunteer in Child Ministries
Volunteer at Tennis Center - taught tennis
Child Care
Petting Sitting Experience
The Dory Club - Dementia
Girls JV Bay League Champs
Tennis Team (non-school) - Open Level
Volunteer - Dog Grooming Center
Volunteer - dances for the disabled
Satellite/Open Level Tournaments (Got to finals in 2, won 2)
Worked for Dad - investment business </p>
<p>Chance for: USC, Chapmen, Occidental, Loyola Marymount, U. of San Diego </p>
<p>I don’t know anything about U san diego, chapman, or occidental, but USC and Loyola are maybes, as long as you maintain the GPA but it’s impossible to tell without test scores. My friend got denied from loyola with a 102 gpa and 1800 SAT with many leadership positions.</p>
<p>Stanford is a probably not, as it is for most candidates… All other schools are a probably.
Those are some good EC’s but arent necessarily good enough for Stanford</p>
<p>It’s really hard to tell without SAT/ACT test scores… Your GPA and course selection do mean a lot, but without the test scores it’s really difficult to tell. And one thing I saw in your classes was that your math classes are a little bit below average. You’re ending high school with Trig. I’m in Trig right now as a sophomore and I live in West Virginia… And I’m hoping that those classes are honors if there isn’t ‘AP’ next to it… Unless you come from a VERY small town, rigorous classes will be necessary to having a chance at getting accepted to those colleges. To get into a higher level math (you really should graduate with at least Pre-Calculus, I might even go as far as saying AP Calculus AB) then you may want to take an extra math course during the summer so that you’ll bump up one. Just a suggestion. I’m really sorry, this probably seems a bit negative, but I’m trying to help you help yourself. I listed a link for my thread below and it would be really nice if you could chance me there.</p>