<p>I honestly think you’re in at all of your schools except for Harvard, Yale and Princeton, but that’s because it’s impossible to say for anyone to be “in” for those schools. If your recs and essays are as you say, in everywhere.</p>
<p>You’re kind of lacking in ECs and definitely Awards (did you get National Merit or AP Scholar?) but I think your stats make up for that mostly–not all though.</p>
<p>MIT [EA] - mid-reach
UPenn [M&T] - match
Princeton - mid- to high- reach (your app is more focused on math/science)
Harvard - mid- to high- reach (same as Princeton)
Yale - mid-reach
Cornell - low- to mid-reach
Dartmouth - match
Duke - match
Rice - match
UNC-CH - don’t know
Carnegie Mellon - match</p>
<p>It seems like I’m being more critical than others here? Idk, you need some awards to make it completely solid.</p>
<p>MIT [EA]: reach-maybe a little lower b/c of EA
UPenn [M&T]: match
Princeton: reach
Harvard: high reach
Yale: reach
Cornell: match
Dartmouth: match
Duke: low match
Rice: in
UNC-CH: in
Carnegie Mellon: low match/in</p>
<p>Hey! Very impressive records! Make sure you play up on your ECs to show that you aren’t just a “nerd”, ESPECIALLY with those incredible SATs! You are good to go! Btw, thanks for chancing me :-).</p>
<p>I mean for any of the ivy league schools it seems that after a certian point to be luck. like can the admission person realte to you or do they really like some component of your application that maybe if you had a different admissions person they would not but i would say that you have a great chance at all of those schools. good luck!</p>
<p>MIT [EA]: reach, VERY tough considering race and scores (VERY impressive, but MIT really does require perfect scores for most students, in my experience)
UPenn [M&T]: reach, idk what M&T admissions look like compared to Wharton, etc.
Princeton: reach
Harvard: high reach (if you had perfect scores, I’d say in guaranteed)
Yale: reach
Cornell: in
Dartmouth: lower reach, Dartmouth can be weirdly picky
Duke: lower reach (in or wl)
Rice: in
UNC-CH: in
Carnegie Mellon: in</p>
<p>^ Err no offense, but do you know what you’re talking about lol? </p>
<p>MIT only considers math and reading, so I do have a perfect score for that. Nonetheless, their admission officers always mention that strong scores have never been a reason for a person to get accepted, and MIT looks at scores a lot less compared to Princeton or other Ivies. I highly doubt 30 extra points on my SAT I/ 50 on my SAT II would put me “in guaranteed” for Harvard.</p>
<p>Thank you for chancing me! I think you have a really great shot at all of them. Even though your ECs are what many consider “average,” they show commitment and how you spend your time outside of the classroom. Your academics are really great and if your essays are excellent too, I wouldn’t concern yourself with extracurriculars. In my opinion, unless they are really different, ECs will not make or break your chances of admission. Here are my thoughts (but I’m in the same boat as you - applying for college - so I’m probably not very accurate) …</p>
<p>MIT [EA]: reach
UPenn [M&T]: in
Princeton: reach
Harvard: reach
Yale: reach
Cornell: in
Dartmouth: reach
Duke: reach
Rice: in
UNC-CH: in
Carnegie Mellon: in</p>
<p>MIT- Low Reach (it is MIT after all…)
UPenn- Low reach (same as MIT)
Princeton- Reach (Your GPA and scores are GREAT but you need a hook)
Harvard- see princeton
yale- see harvard
Cornell- Match
Dartmouth- High March
Duke- High Match
Rice- Match
UNC- Match (WAY hard for OOS)
Carnegie Mellong- Safety</p>
<p>MIT- low reach
UPenn- high match
Princeton- high reach (for anyone. But you have a great chance!)
Harvard- high reach
yale- high reach
Cornell- in
Dartmouth- High Match
Duke- High Match
Rice- In
UNC- In
Carnegie Mellon- In</p>
<p>you upset me. because you’re applying to similar schools, and you>>>>>>me. -enters state of depression-
but you’re probably into most. Harvard/Yale/Princeton are questionable, as with everyone. </p>
<p>MIT – small reach
UPenn – small reach
Harvard/Yale – high reach
Cornell – match
Dartmouth – high match
Duke – in
Rice – high match
UNC – safety
Carnegie Mellon – match</p>