Chances of admission into MIT, Harvard and Penn

<p>Hi, here are my credentials.</p>

<p>2008-2010: First two years of BSc physics at Imperial College London - 89% in my first year and 69% in the second year.</p>

<p>2010-2012: took gap years due to financial difficulty</p>

<p>2012-2013: Final year of BSc Physics at Imperial College London - expected to obtain 80% in the third year. Expected to graduate with first class honours degree.</p>

<p>What are my chances of getting into Harvard, MIT, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Caltech, Penn, UC Berkeley, Michigan, Columbia, New York University, CUNY, British Columbia, Toronto, McGill for postgraduate physics course? Will I get 100% scholarship from any of the universities? Should I am lower?</p>

<p>You need SATs, and your GPA is not so striking but why would you even want to leave Imperial isn’t that one of the best Unis in UK?</p>

<p>Long time lurker here. He’s talking about PG and not transferring. He’ll need to take the GRE</p>

<p>Assuming you will be pursuing a Ph.D. degree, you would receive a graduate fellowship that includes a waiver of tuition plus a stipend. In return you would be a research/teaching assistant.</p>

<p>I am not familiar with British grading but for most of those schools your stats would have to be exceptional plus having done undergraduate research. A 69% or 80% does not sound very impressive although I have no idea how they would translate into a North American style GPA.</p>

<p>I kinda have the same question… im italian, good at math and i just took the SAT scoring around 1800, 780 for math. 18 years old good soccer player playing in a team for money, italian mothertongue, good english, chinese and spanish speaker, i just spent one year om a AFS programme in china. next year im going to australia for a gap year in order to get some money. i was wondering what are my chances to get in a good math college like MIT with a total scolarship, maybe for soccer. please im really really confused right now about what i could do in the future. thanks</p>