<p>What do you think my chances are at stern nyu early, jhu, tufts, etc.?
Sats (one attempt): V:600 M:730 W:760
Gpa:3.66 (Take honors classes and some AP next year)</p>
<p>I also go to the number 3 public school in NJ</p>
<p>ExtraCurriculars: president of chess club, president of stock market, treasurer of multicultural (possibly president next year), spanish club, 2 years soccer, track, varsity bowling</p>
<p>Business Experience:
starbucks employee, nycmercedes.com, other website businesses, stock portfolio (15% growth)</p>
<p>Cant think of any more stuff at the moment.</p>
<p>I have no idea what your chances are but I just thought I should mention that my statistics are almost exactly the same, I am in many of the same clubs, and I also work at starbucks. Pretty much, we are living the same life.</p>
<p>bump...I could use more feedback</p>
<p>Stern NYU: You're in ED. Be prepared though, I've heard NYU's finaid packages suck. </p>
<p>Hopkins: Tough. You probably need a 2150 to be looked at really seriously. Early DEcision might help here. </p>
<p>Tufts: Never heard of Tufts, sorry.</p>
<p>If I were you, I would look at Rice in Texas (I am, they accept 40% of out of state apps), Rutgers (state school in NJ, you'll get a good deal), The College of New Jersey (you'll probably get in, tuition is only like $7000 a year). </p>
<p>If you can get the SAT up by like 50 points, look seriously at Boston College, Notre Dame (this will be a reach though), and also check out Villanova.</p>
<p>One more thing: stick with job at Starbucks. Most kids applying to these schools are rich brats whose parents pay for People to People and Young Congressional Leaders. These don't look that good to the colleges. A school like NYU Stern might see that you're working hard and saving money yourself and not just living off of your parents. This could be a draw.</p>