<p>This isn't Justina. This is her friend, Jodie.</p>
<p>Sewickley, PA
Female, caucasian
Double legacy (both parents)</p>
<p>SAT: 660M, 690CR, 740W, 2090 overall
SAT II: Biology M: 750 Math II: 700 U.S. History: 690
ACT: 32
4 APs: Bio: 5, US: 4, Euro: 4, Psych: 4
Taking Calc, Gov, English
GPA: Weighted: 4.66 (don't know UW)</p>
<p>Altheltics: Varsity Lacorsse 3 years (3 letters), JV captain 1 yr</p>
<p>EC:
NHS President
Student rep to School Board
Student rep to town borough council
Vice -president of SADD
Spent 5 weeks at Pennsylvania Governor's School for Teaching
Went to Notre Dame Summer Scholars
Camp counselor
Volunteer at retirement home
Work at bookstore
Prom Committee
Yearbook Committee
Bowling Club, Spanish Club, and French club member, three years each
Club Lacrosse</p>
<p>Awards:
Wellsley College Book Award
Outstanding Young Citizen Award
IB Award</p>
<p>Early? Regular? Let me knoww</p>
<p>Any idea on class rank? Even a guess is very helpful as a 4.6 at one school is very different than at another. Thanks!</p>
<p>yeah our school doesn't rank. i know im in the top 10%, maybe top 5%</p>
<p>I think you (or your friend, I am not sure :)) have a decent shot at ND. I know that doesn't sound good, but what I mean is I think you are a competitive applicant and you have numbers around the average, though possibly a little on the low side. For this reason I wouldn't recommend EA (though ask admissions to be sure) but I definitely encourage you to apply.</p>
<p>You/your friend seems to be the average student who gets admitted into ND. I would think the double legacy puts you/her in a great position to be accepted. Overall, nothing is guaranteed, but excellent chance.</p>
<p>Being a double legacy and having the median ACT and good EC's, 90% certain you will get in. (legacies have 40% admittance rate at ND)</p>
<p>I wouldn't rule out EA for you. Double legacies with a 1350 and top 5% would be competitive in that pool, and have certainly been admitted in recent years. I can't see you getting rejected in EA, so the worst that happens is deferral.</p>