Chances Please

<p>Hi everyone. I'm currently a senior in high school and will be applying for acceptance into a biomedical engineering program shorty. I have a 4.0+ GPA, top 10%, 6 APs and a decent list of ECs. I performed rather dismally on my SATs M-650 V-670 W-620. I will be retaking them in december. My SAT II scores are slightly better Bio M-740, Math 2-670, Hist-700, Span-660. AP Bio: 5. AP Comp Sci: 5. AP Hist: 5. I am hoping that my performance in science will slightly boost my admissions chances. I was wondering if anyone has recommendations as to which programs are realistic for my statistics. As of now, I plan on applying to BU, Stevens, JHU, WPI, Cornell, Case, Rensselaer, Lehigh, RIT and U Maryland. Any comments would be greatly appreciated. Thanks alot!</p>

<p>Boston University--Safe Match
Stevens--Safe Match to Match
JHU--Slight Reach
WPI--Safe Match to Match </p>

<p>Cornell--Match to Slight Reach (you are close to match except that your SAT is low for the school, since 2100 is their average and you are at 1940) </p>

<p>Case Western - Match
Rensselaer - Match
Lehigh - Match </p>

<p>RIT--Did you mean University of Rochester (much higher rated school) or Rochester Institute of Technology?
University of Rochester--Match
RIT--Safety </p>

<p>Univ of Maryland, College Park - Match</p>

<p>Thanks for the vote of confidence! I'm still a little worried about my SAT scores. I will bring them up come December though.</p>

<p>I was talking about RIT, and it was more of a safety for me. University of Rochester also has a good biomedical engineering program. I'm going to look into it more. Thanks!</p>

<p>U of Rochester may be a higher rated school, but RIT consistently is higher rated in engineering. (For obvious reasons.)</p>