Chances?

<p>Hi,
I am a California Community College student who really wants to transfer for Fall 05. I have only been here for one year and Im applying as a junior transfer becuase I took so many AP classes in high school. </p>

<p>High school:
GPA=4.33
ECs= not alot of them. No sports. French Club, Honor Society, CSF, etc. I have been working since the day I turned 15, usually at least 20 hours a week. However, I can make this look more impressive than it is on applications.
Awards= Honor Scholar, Bank of America Social Sciences Award, National Merit Semifinalist
SAT= 1380
SAT II= 760 (US History), 750 (Writing), 740 (Math 2C)
AP Scores:
European History=3
US History=5
Biology=4
US Government=4
English Literature=4
Calculus BC=5</p>

<p>College:
GPA= 3.7 (I got straight A's last semester and I should again this semester. The B's are from 2 classes I took while a junior in high school.)
ECs= I dont have any. I work. This is definitely my super-weak spot. </p>

<p>My recommend. will be very good (I babysit my English teachers kid). I am applying to UC Berkeley, Stanford, UCSB (guaranteed admission), George Washington University, and NYU. What do you guys think my chances are at these schools? I am undeclared at all of them except Berkeley (American Studies). I REALLY want to go to Berkeley. Thank you so much for your help, this whole thing is so stressful.</p>

<p>american studies..?? doesn't sound like a hard major to get into...you will probably get in..good luck</p>

<p>wait...can junior transfers have undeclared?</p>

<p>For some schools. Not for UCs (thus the American Studies), but for NYU, GW, and Stanford I can apply undeclared.</p>

<p>Does anyone else have any opinions? Thanks alot.</p>

<p>innnnnnnnnnnnnn everywhere except stanford</p>

<p>Great chance at UCB and others except Stanford. BTW, a great rec isn't a teacher you babysit for saying you're great. It's one who teaches you saying you're among the most brilliant kids they everr taught and your work with them has gotten national recognition.</p>

<p>in everywhere, not sure about Stanford. (too few data)</p>