<p>I go to a very competetive and distinguished California Public school.
last year we had at least 20% of the class going to top 30 schools.
Ive already done chances threads b4, but now i would like to know specifically for University of Toronto and McGill.</p>
<p>GPA 9-12 uw 3.49 w 3.75 (freshman and sophomore year i slacked off alot. Straight A's all junior year till current date.)
5 ap's and 3 honors.</p>
<p>SAT-2180
sat2-MAth2 710, chem-700, US history 720</p>
<p>rank-top 30%</p>
<p>EC's
varsity tennis-2 years
200+hrs volunteer service
3 missions trips to mexico
wrestling 1 year
Church leadership 2 years
Privately tutored in Japanese and spanish for 1.5 years(not cause im dumb, btu cause i want to learn)</p>
<p>you should get in without much trouble
u of t and mcgill put most emphasis on marks (gr. 11 and 12 marks I think), and since you have maintained straight A's through gr. 11 and 12, your sub-par grade 9 and 10 marks will be overlooked.</p>
<p>Also, I don't think you need recs/essays for getting into those universities (unless you are applying their university-specific scholarships).</p>
<p>Yea, considering you got straight A's, you really should be in for U of T. I'm not really sure about going in from the states, but to get in from Ontario, they look at the marks of your top 6 university or university/college courses. All they really care about are your grade 12 marks, unless you're really super smart, then they'll look at your grade 11 marks for early admission. I believe in that in some cases, they'll weed out applicants based on grade 11 marks. Your freshmen/sophomore marks shouldn't matter though(unless they have different standards for internationals).
They look for averages of 80 something percent and up. An 80% + is an A-/A/A+</p>
<p>I say you're fine for Toronto.
Okay, I'll stop talking now lol.</p>