Chances please

<p>chance me please</p>

<p>White Male, New York
SAT: V:720 M:640 W:590
GPA: UW 3.15
School dosent rank
Clubs/EC's:
Member of Chess club for 4 years
Vice President of Computer club
President of Junior States of America
200 hours of community service
Winner of the 2007 Education Award for Outstanding Determination in Computer Studies
I have taken 3 ap courses throughout highschool</p>

<p>def. in. </p>

<p>10 charc.</p>

<p>GPA is a bit low, but the SATs should probably make up for it. </p>

<p>Indiana University at Bloomington is really "big" on admitting those who are at least in the top 50% of their high school class. 98% of all students at IU-B fall into this category.</p>

<p>So, ask your school where you rank and you'll have a pretty good idea of your chances. (Also, if you are in the top 50%, make sure that shows up on your transcript--and if you aren't in the top 50%, see if your school will leave your rank off of the transcript).</p>

<p>does being out of state help me or hurt me? and i talked to my guidance counselor and she said they dont even bother caculating ranks.</p>

<p>They normally enroll 68% from in-state and 32% from out-of-state. This year, due to the financial crisis, they may increase in-state enrollment slightly (since the number of in-state students applying is up by over 32%) to help out those who can't afford more expensive schools. This is likely to make it slightly more difficult for out-of-state students to be admitted--and is likely to mean an increase in tuition for both in-state and out-of-state students of over 6%.</p>

<p>the admissions guy who came to my school said IU is being more selective because they overbooked this years freshman class</p>