<p>I am a white male attending a College Prep School outside of Chicago.
All Stats and ECs through my Junior year</p>
<p>SAT Dec 2009: M 710 CR 650 W 710
SAT Jan 2010: M 770 CR 750 W 640
SUPERSCORE 2230</p>
<p>Freshman Year 3.0
Sophomore 3.75UW 3.9 W
Junior 3.8 UW 4.23 W
Total 3.5 UW 3.7 W
Class Rank 38/115
My freshman grades really killed me. My class rank sucks because of those and because its a competitive private school with entrance exam.
NOT ELIGIBLE FOR FINANCIAL AID</p>
<p>Nation Merit Commended PSAT 209
1 year of latin club
2 years of latin team
Silver medal national latin exam
State Qualifier for Illinois Latin tournament
3 years math team- lots of awards
Latin Honor Society
Math tutoring
3 years of Lacrosse- Captain Junior Year
Influential in starting of Lacrosse Team
Decent amount of Community Service
2 years football, might play again senior year too
3 years rotc- held leadership position</p>
<p>Your SATs are great but your GPA might bring it down a bit. Still, your ECs are good too so I guess it depends how well UNC knows your school and if the admcom is willing to adjust for your rank with your SAT score.</p>
<p>stats good. not needing financial aid good. ecs look good. the lax thing is interesting. it’s kind of a crapshoot for OOS students but i think you have a solid shot. remember that state schools don’t track interest (i.e. visits and whatnot). don’t slack on the essays. </p>
<p>being male’s probably going to be a hook pretty soon when applying to unc… haha</p>
<p>It is tough for an in-state student to get in with a weighted GPA under 4.0, so for OSS, your GPA will probably hurt you significantly in the admissions process. Your SAT scores and ECs are great though, so I think you have a chance, but UNC is a reach for you as a non-NC resident.</p>
<p>Also UNC IS NEED BLIND. So they do not consider your financial aid status when considering you for admissions. Should you get in, I would highly recomeend that you apply for financial aid, since UNC is second to none when it comes to need based aid, and filling the FAFSA doesn’t hurt.</p>