<p>Right now i'm a highschool senior (just finished junior year). I goto
an international school in Seoul, Korea. (But American-citizen)
My overall GPA is 3.7 (unweighted)
*Our school's "A" starts from 94%.</p>
<p>In total i took 5 APs .
- Chem
- Euro
- Cal AB
- Statistic,
- Psychology</p>
<p>Also i took 4 SAT IIs .
- Chem: 760
- Bio: 780
- IIC: 800
- Korean: 800</p>
<p>My SAT is ~2200.</p>
<p>Extra-curriculum
- Tennis 3 years (co-captain)
- Went to Far East tournament (competition among international schools
in Asia) for tennis, twice.
- Several different community services in hospitals.
- Community service in hospital that helps illegal immigrants. (3 years) I believe this serves as an internship,too.
- UNICEF
- Vice Pres. of Chinese Club (Published Chinese magazines for school)
- Went out to the school English Tournament as a representative
of 10th grade.
+and other minor stuffs..+</p>
<p>Thank you for reading those.
Now, plz comment me on my chances for those schools..
- Cornell
- UPENN
- UCLA
-Michigan Ann Arbor
- Johns Hopkins
- Brown
- UC Berkley
- Duke
- Northwestern</p>
<p>international is very competitive, but you should apply to a lower tier school. get to know the system, get a good GPA and then transfer. I have a cousin from China who first went to a community college in China then transferred to UNC Chapel Hill......Transfer increases your chances by alot than direct international application...</p>
<p>wait... he's an international even though he's a US citizen.. is it based on residency? and how long do people have to live outside the US to be international? (So if someone goes on a foreign exchange trip their senior yr, they apply as an international?) ...weird...</p>
<p>I'm an US citizen..and have american passport..
i'm not an international student..
i just go to an internationa school in korea,
its just like american school in korea,
we have same education system as american schools'.</p>