Chances at Yale?

<p>Hi everyone, I'm an Indian girl from the Midwest.</p>

<p>Does anyone have any idea what my chances are at HYP, Stanford and MIT?</p>

<p>Stats:
GPA u/w 3.86. In top 1-2% of class (size 130). Very rigorous private school. Highest GPA last year was 3.88
SAT scores: 770 CR, 790 Math, 770 Writing (total: 2330)
SAT II: 800 Math IIC, 790 Chemistry, 750 Spanish</p>

<ul>
<li>Taken 9 APs by the end of junior year (all 5s): I was the first junior at my school to become a national AP scholar.</li>
<li><p>I'm taking 5 APs this year and a multivariable calculus and linear algebra course at a university</p></li>
<li><p>Won a science award given to 2 high school students in my state -- got a research stipend of $1200 -- did research work this summer at a university and wrote a research paper.</p></li>
</ul>

<p>ECs</p>

<p>Violin:
- Honors Recital in MacPhail Center for the Arts, Spring 2004 – one of seven students selected to perform.
- Violinist in orchestra for 7 years – 1st violin section of Symphony (highest level orchestra) for 4 years.
- Invited student at Madeline Island Music Camp by a competitive selection process.
- Lots of other competitions and everything... </p>

<ul>
<li>Founded the International Club: Organized 4 International Fairs and Fiestas and lots of other stuff</li>
<li>Co-editor of Activist newspaper.<br></li>
<li>Member of Student Interactive Committee since 11th grade. Organized Freshman Welcome and New-student orientation.</li>
</ul>

<p>Volunteer stuff:
- Tutor at an inner city high school – teach English, Math and Science to Somali immigrants for 3 hours a week – 2 years
- Violin teacher to inner city elementary school students at Whittier School for the Arts for 2 hours a week – 3 years
- Intern at a hospital for 4 hours a week – 2 years</p>

<p>Any help would be much appreciated! Thanks!</p>

<p>wow you're awesome. AND FROM THE MIDWEST! You've got good chances anywhere.</p>

<p>thanks... anyone else?</p>

<p>in everywhere you apply, granted that you apply to SEAS/Science programs. If you go for an english major or something it would just look weird to adcoms (since you have such stellar scientific accomplishments). Just out of curiosity, where in the midwest you from?
btw, im indian too... (i represent them colorado desis)</p>

<p>if you don't get in, i don't know who could.</p>

<p>I think you have a good chance! Especially since you have high SAT and SAT II scores!</p>

<p>Good luck!</p>

<p>Good chances...</p>

<p>Did you paper publish in a journal, or was it more like a conference paper?</p>

<p>Which youth symphony are you in? Also whats the name of the science award? Good chances by the way.</p>

<p>i co-authored one of the papers with a professor - so that might be published sometime soon... but the other paper is just for a state science fair.</p>

<p>i'm from minnesota - my orchestra is called GTCYS</p>

<p>wow ur stats are almost exactly the same as mine (cept u've got a much better GPA). I think you've got a really good shot at all the schools you've applied to, hope we both get into yale.</p>

<p>bump bump bump</p>

<p>For a school that only admits 9% of its applicants, the odds are 91% against you. The school is a reach for you and pretty much everyone else who applies.</p>

<p>being from the mid west is not a hool because most students Still hail from NY, MA, CA, NJ, TX (because proportionately more applicants coming from these states. So a student coming from these states are in a very competitive pool.) Even though there are students admitted from the midwest, the numbers are still pretty low.</p>

<p>make sure that you have a balanced list of reach, match and safety schools.</p>

<p>The odds aren't the same for everyone. Say I applied with a 850 SAT score and a 2.1 GPA. The odds wouldn't just be 91% against me.</p>

<p>To the OP, I would think that you would be very hard to turn down anywhere. Did you apply ED? If not, apply to some other top schools as well. Though I very much doubt that you wouldn't get into your first choice, no matter where it is.</p>

<p>thanks everyone!</p>

<p>i applied to harvard easc... but i'm not getting my hopes up or anything.
i'd really really really love to get into yale, tho...</p>

<p>does anyone have a guess about my chances are for these schools?
wash u
northwestern
johns hopkins
berkeley
duke
dartmouth</p>

<p>Do you have any safeties? Make sure you have some, because even with incredible stats like yours there is an off chance that you somehow won't get in anywhere..</p>

<p>Solid chances everywhere, I'd say. Harvard is a reach for anyone not named Stephen Hawking or William H. Rehnquist.</p>

<p>I'd say you have good chances but you never know with Yale. A friend of mine applied last year with stats almost exactly like yours but she was rejected. You really never know. Good luck though</p>

<p>"Harvard is a reach for anyone not named Stephen Hawking or William H. Rehnquist."</p>

<p>Harvard's a pretty big reach for Rehnquist too, these days.</p>

<p>I agree with gmman aobut having a balanced list of matches and safeties. remember that most of these schools are not at a loss of smart kids. If that is what all it took they could fill their classes 10 times over. The focus is on building a well rounded class that achieves the institutional mission which changes from year to year.</p>

<p>I would suggest the following</p>

<p>[ol]
[li] Go to the parents forurm and post a question about the "Yale massacre" of the past 2 admissions cycles where a bunch of equally "stellar" students were deferred/rejected from yale.</p>[/li]
<p>[li]Read the post on Andison's an really smart gifted musician, stellar stats who got either rejected or waitlisted everywhere and had to take a GAP year.</p>[/li]
<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=96791%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=96791&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>[li] read the article "the Receipe for Success" about how the 11 admission officers at Williams balance scores of priorities from the campus</p>[/li]
<p><a href="http://www.williams.edu/alumni/alumnireview/fall05/recipe.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.williams.edu/alumni/alumnireview/fall05/recipe.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>[li]read the featured threads on the parent's forum</p>[/li]
<p>My dinner with an admissions officer</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=96791%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=96791&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>and </p>

<p>How hard Admissions Can be</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=116204%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=116204&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Ben Jones-from MIT repsonse to the parents on the admissions process (which I will post as a separate answer because it is so important)</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=97255&page=3&pp=20%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=97255&page=3&pp=20&lt;/a>
[/ol]
all the best</p>

<p>Ben Jones' response on the Parent's Forum thread WHoever has the most APs wins:</p>

<p>*Thanks to both Mootmom & ADad for their invitations to contribute my opinions to this thread. Sorry for the delayed response; as mootmom noted above, I've been out on fall recruitment travel with limited access to the internet for the last 3 weeks.</p>

<p>As with most of my posts in the parents' forum, I'll try to respond both as an MIT adcom and also as a parent. This'll be sortof long, sorry.</p>

<p>First, the MIT adcom perspective.</p>

<p>I don't know the exact numbers; I couldn't tell you even if I thought it would be helpful. Numbers mean nothing to us because ~70% of our applicant pool is qualified in those terms.</p>

<p>Based on the thousands of apps I saw last year both in selection committee and as a reader, I can tell you that the average # of AP's for admitted kids was 5 or 6 (that's total for all 4 years of HS - i.e. 1-2 per year if evenly distributed). Many admits (most likely the majority) had no college classes. The most common AP's taken were in math and science (no surprise, it's MIT). The overwhelming majority got 4's and 5's on all tests.</p>

<p>I'll pause here to add that I frequently saw kids with perfect SAT scores and perfect grades and a gazillion AP classes get rejected. Why? Because often these kids knew how to grind, but brought nothing else to the table. And that's not who we're looking for at MIT. We admit kids who show genuine passion. Sure AP's can be one of many passion indicators - but I emphasize one of many.</p>

<p>When I was on the road, kids asked me repeatedly whether or not they should take a given AP class.</p>

<p>"Well," I'd respond, "would you be taking it because you genuinely want to, or simply because you think it will get you into college?"</p>

<p>Sometimes they didn't know the difference, which is a tragedy that deserves its own thread. But I digress.</p>

<p>And this is where you all start saying that adcoms are talking out of both sides of our mouths: we encourage kids to follow their hearts in the choices they make, and then as adcoms we want to see that they've taken "the most challenging courseload."</p>

<p>To which I say: guys, I work for MIT! If a kid doesn't want to be taking a challenging courseload in high school, that kid is certainly not going to be happy here.</p>

<p>Quite simply, the students who are happiest here are those who thrive on challenge. Most of our admits have taken AP math and science because they would have been bored silly in the regular classes. Indeed, they genuinely wanted to take those classes. They don't look at MIT as the prize; they look at MIT as the logical next step. It's an important distinction.</p>

<p>That said, AP's are not the only way to demonstrate that one is passionate and likes challenge. Read Anthony's story for an example:
<a href="http://anthony.mitblogs.com/archive..._im_anthon.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://anthony.mitblogs.com/archive..._im_anthon.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>When faced with the choice, we will always choose "the right match*" over numbers. We're not lying when we say that. You've heard me beat that sentiment to death in other threads, so I won't do so here.</p>

<p>(*Match = mission, collaborative spirit, hands-on, balance, character, and passion, among others.)</p>

<p>But the reality is that when you have 10,500+ applications for ~1000 spots and 70% of the pool has great numbers, your pool is going to have plenty of kids who have the passion and the match and the scores/grades/AP's. So we admit those kids - what other choice do we have?</p>

<p>But then (understandably) you guys say "Look! You need X, Y, and Z to get into MIT!" To clarify, we don't require those things; many of our admits just happen to have them. And, I might add, for the right reasons.</p>

<p>This brings me to the more important part, where we toss my affiliation with MIT out the window and I give you my thoughts as a parent.</p>

<p>There is only one coin. There are many sides to the coin, but there is only one coin. And you can flip it however you like.</p>

<p>So when a parent says to me, "Why does HYPSM put so much emphasis on AP's?" I reply "Why do you put so much emphasis on HYPSM?" When a parent says "My kid's value as a person/student shouldn't be measured by how many AP's he/she has taken" I say "...and your kid's value as a person/student shouldn't be measured by whether or not he/she goes to HYPSM." I could go on and on.</p>

<p>There are literally hundreds of amazing colleges and universities out there (some of which actually admit kids with no AP's!). Many of them would actually be better matches for your child. Many of them would provide your child with a better education. Most importantly, many of them would ultimately give your child a greater sense of happiness and fulfillment. The right match will do that.</p>

<p>And the match goes both ways. We try to determine if your kid is a good match for MIT. Your kid should be trying to determine which school is the best match for him/her. As a parent, what are you doing to help him/her figure that out?</p>

<p>Here's a hint: if you're spending time obsessing that a lack of AP's is going to keep your kid out of Stanford, you're missing the point.</p>

<p>As I told the kids in my blog, I had a wonderful college experience that I wouldn't trade for anything, at a school that is currently only #23 on the USNWR LAC list (The HORROR!). I got a phenomenal education and can certainly hold my own against any Ivy grad. As a bonus I got to grow up, get married, have kids, buy a house, land a great job, and enjoy life.</p>

<p>I took one AP class in high school.</p>

<p>Make sure your kids are choosing their schools for the right reasons. Name, status, "brand" - these are not the right reasons. Let your kids be kids. Let them follow their hearts. Encourage them to have a present, not just a future. Don't let them define themselves by which colleges accept them - and don't let them define themselves by doing things only to get into certain colleges.</p>

<p>The machine is fed from all sides. USNWR, the media in general, the GC's, the parents, the colleges and universities, the high-priced independent counselors, the test prep people...</p>

<p>My kids are still many years away from college, and I'm no expert on the parent side of this process. But I do know one thing: I will fight to protect them from all of this, to help them with perspective and clarity. Because if I don't, who will?</p>

<p>Because if we don't, who will?*</p>

<p>-B</p>