<p>Can anyone tell me the chance or if I use ED, any more chance?
- 3.66 GPA (up to the end of junior) Senior may get 3.9
- SAT: 2110 (Reading: 590, Math: 800, writing:720)
- AP: Calc AB, 5; Statis 4; Chem 3; Senior taking Physics and Computer Science
- National Art Honor Society
- National Merit Scholar
- Scholastic Gold Key, Silver Key in Art
- Royal Acadimic Piano level 8 passed; NYSSMA Piano level 6 passed
- Toshiba National Science Teachers Assocaition honorable winner
- Leader of Asian Awareness Club</p>
<p>bump…</p>
<p>Not a chance:
Need at least
GPA: +4.33 (W)
SAT I: +2250
SAT II: 800 Both
EC: +200 hours
Essay: Best</p>
<p>Get yourself a safety, since Cooper Union is unreachable.</p>
<p>Try NYU-Poly, NEU, RPI, RIT or WPI…</p>
<p>I’m sorry, but as the others have said it is a bit unrealistic, your stats are low, you’re an ORM and you have no ECs that relate to engineering.</p>
<p>It’s a huge reach but don’t be discouraged if you really want to go there. ED could obviously help.</p>
<p>With due respect to thirrdplanet, this is a poor use of ED. ED helps when you’re competitive.</p>
<p>Cooper union is a very very popular engineering college… Think about it…
It’s one of the top in the country, it’s in NYC, and it’s FREE. Personally I’d be tempted to pick CU over MIT and Stanford if given the opportunity. Just keep that in mind</p>
<p>Sorry to bash you like this but where are you getting these stats from? I saw you post this on someone else’s question also. I got into Cooper with lower stats than that and I wasn’t a standout student or anything, I just think my stats were good enough to get me noticed and my essay and responses is what made them take me.</p>
<p>This is such an old thread and ED results are already out, but I’ll say this anyway: No Cooper is not “unreachable” with those numbers. Six of about 10 who applied Cooper ED this year at my school got in. They had GPAs that hovered around a 3.8 and SATs that were ~2100 (besides the one kid that got a 34 ACT). None of them had any super spectacular extracurriculars.</p>
<p>Really? Darn then I should have applied x(</p>