Chances of getting into Johns Hopkins, Cornell, Michigan-Ann Arbor, UC Berkeley, UCLA, UCSD

Demographics: Female, Indian, Non US-resident/ permanent resident
School: British curriculum (GCSEs, A-Levels)
GPA: 4.15 (after converting it)
SAT: 1980
SAT II: Maths Level 1 (700) (yet to take other subject tests)

ECAs:

Work experience shadowing doctors and nurses (interested in medical career) ( 1 week)
Volunteering work at a special needs school (1 week)
Writer for academic journal (Sciences section) (2 years)
Member of school choir (2 years)
Fundraising for charity (by coming up with events to raise money) (4 months)
Board member of School Electoral Committee (6 months)
Art classes (Drawing and Painting) (2 years)
Went on an ecological research expedition (2 weeks)
Tutoring kids in school (1 year)

I am afraid that all the schools you have chosen are very competitive. Your credentials are good but they don’t place you in the upper echelon-something necessary to gain entry to the schools you have listed. I am guessing you are not a junior or senior so you can improve your scores to be more competitive.

I read some of your threads and see that you were a junior last year so a senior now.Hopkins requires at least two SAT 2’s. Your math 1 at 700 place you at about the 81%ile but it is compared to the less strong group who take the math tests. The Math 2 would be a better choice.If you want to attend college in the US you probably should also choose some less competitive schools.

@lostaccount Hello, I have chosen Wisconsin-Madison, UC Davis, and UC Santa Barbara and according to percentage calculators on websites I have a slightly higher chance of getting into them (40-50%) as opposed to the ones listed above. I have been accepted into a school outside the US (still in the Top 20 in the world and very selective) so I chose US schools that were on par with/ better than it. I have quite a good backup so I was aiming high; just curious about my chances