<p>SAT I: 690 Verbal; 740 Math
SAT II: Math IIC 800 Writing: 730 Chem 720 Math 1C 720</p>
<p>EC's:
-Soccer 4yrs (both club team and school) - co-captain of one
-Intramural soccer 3yrs
-Track 3yrs
-Math team 4yrs
-A few other clubs (co-president of one)</p>
<p>Essays: OK (I worked hard on it and I think they are great but just assume that they are okay)</p>
<p>You have a decent chance (solid GPA and excellent SAT), but you applied late. It is hard to predict at this point, but I would say your chances are better than average but not excellent.</p>
<p>HAHAHAHA omg you guys have no idea how many people get in. It's not that hard. At least fifty people go there from my school every year. Some with barely your stats. Juat wait and let it come. </p>
<p>I applied in LATE NOVEMBER. So did a bunch of my friends. No one is worrying. It' s a safety school for some other kids.
(although I don't know if it's different if you're out of state)</p>
<p>karyotype is totally wrong. probably just saying that cuz he's applying.</p>
<p>Actually, the apple, it is you who seems to not know how hard it is to get into Michigan. For non-minority, non-athlete applicants to the colleges of LSA and Engineering, Michigan is very selective. And those who apply after October face a steeper slope. The year I graduated from high schoo, 11 of my fellow students applied from my class and all 11 got in. But we all have 1400+ on our SATs and excellent grades. Hertish has a good chance, but Michigan is not a safety to any student that isn't perfect. Michigan is a safety for Harvard material applicants.</p>
<p>I know at least 5 people who've gotten in now with 26-29 ACT scores and ~3.6 GPA. After hearing who these people are, I think it's a bit easier to get in than Alexandre is saying.</p>
<p>Hmm, I wonder if the standards will shoot up after this month.
However, I do know 3 friends that have ~3.7-3.8 and 27ACT +applied early but have received notices yet. </p>
<p>but Hertish, I think you're a match for U of M.</p>
<p>Remarkable. It's mid-November and you guys have U-M's selectivity all figured out, and it's going downhill (you say). LOL</p>
<p>Obviously U-M admits a lot of people, so it's not Princeton. But the idea that you can know someone's ACTs and assume you know what their application looked like? Not credible. You don't just send a test score and transcript. You guys know that, you applied. U-M does a holistic review. You don't know what was in the file of those students you're mentioning; therefore, you can't make broad, sweeping conclusions about how easy it is going to be for anyone (or everyone) else to get in.</p>
<p>oh hey maybe you're right..but i;m non athletic..but idid get over 1400 on the sats and princeton was actually where i wanted to go. but now that i'm here i love it and am so freaking glad princeton deferred me..or waitlisted..is that the same..oh well..GO BLUE!!!</p>
<p>I'd bet a lot of people get accepted, because a lot of people apply. Northville is a pretty good public school, from what I understand, with a decent college preparatory program. </p>
<p>I don't know what the college advising is like, but hopefully given the app volume, the guidance staff at the school know what kinds of students should consider U-M as an option, and which ones for whom it may not be realistic. Guidance like that will also influence the acceptance rate from a particular high school.</p>
<p>I would find it highly unusual if graduates from a school like Northville couldn't get into the state flagship. I don't think it signifies what some of this list seem to think it signifies.</p>