<p>You’re going to be fine… One thing that pennsylvania really looks for is being devoted… so devote yourself to each one of those activites… other than that great job!</p>
<p>Apparently there is a limit of 8 colleges you can apply to from my high school. So far I have: Wharton, Columbia, Cornell, UChicago, Carnegie Mellon, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, Emory… 1 slot remaining. :S</p>
<p>It probably should be a school you know you can get into and will give you good financial aid so that your family won’t have to pay as much in case your other schools don’t give alot.</p>
<p>Well I don’t need financial aid at all and my family is not worried about money at all so I am trying to maximize my possibilities with that last slot.</p>
<p>Ah, ok. Well then I suggest maybe another match school, just because you have a lot of schools that are usually reaches for others and crapshoots when it comes to admissions overall.</p>
<p>Which one would you recommend considering my stats, that provides a high level of undergraduate training in business/economics (I am hoping it is ranked well so it aids my admissions for graduate school)?</p>
<p>I’d say you got really big chances :). I think that admission doesn’t count that much on SAT scores, but anyway, only my opinion. To have a bulletproof application just raise your sat score a bit. Good luck! ;)</p>
<p>Your stats really caught my interest - I love how you took seemingly generic activities (e.g. teaching English) and took it a step further (over 400 hours to 10 children). </p>
<p>I think you have an excellent shot at all of the schools, including all the Ivy League schools. Best of luck! </p>
<p>I’d also appreciate it if you could chance me back </p>
<p>Hey guys, I just took the SAT and I know I got a score between 2240 and 2340. If you were placed with my application and you were an admissions officer, how much of a difference would you see between a 2240 and a 2340 if everything else was the same?</p>