<p>i'm from canada toronto so i'd be international
gpa 3.3 yep it sux hell
SAT CR720 Math 770 Writ 760 2150
SAT II math 790 chem 760
no AP courses
within 3% from a national math competition out of 30000 contestant. </p>
<p>canada universities don't look at ur gr 10 and 11 marks at all so I slacked off alot.
would gr 12 midterm mark be considered part of ur grade as well? cuz i got
A+ on all course this time for mid term..</p>
<p>how slim are my chances of gettin in? for civil engineering ?
thnx in advance</p>
<p>completely ignoring your GPA, you'd be in no problem</p>
<p>that being said
I'm not sure how case will interpret your GPA, but considering your test scores, I think you'd still have a pretty good shot at getting in. </p>
<p>And definitely send in first semester 12 transcripts, if the grades are good, I'm sure it can't hurt</p>
<p>You're into CWRU; Cleveland's not Toronto though, but Case is very good for civil eng. I'd also look into Univ. of Rochester and RPI if I were you.</p>
<p>do you think i have at least a small chance of receiving any scholorships?
US universities are pretty darn expensive compared to canada's . -_-....</p>
<p>I would check with the schools you are applying to re internationals receiving scholarships. Normally they do not, according to what I have read/heard.</p>
<p>hm... not really sure why.. but they only use gr 11 mark (gr10 is completey ignored) when the university is trying to decide between students who have same gpa(average). Otherwise, gr 11 mark doesn't matter much. You can skip as many classes as you want since they won't really care.</p>
<p>Where as university in the states look for ur extra curr. activites, ur essays, ur SAT scores, for most canadian universities, they only look at ur mark period. Besides a few very competitive programs, its relatively easier to get in compared to US universities. Its easy to get in to universities but very hard to graduate with a good gpa especially at University of Toronto.</p>
<p>You're a match for Case. I mean I had worse grades and a lower SAT (not by much) and I got in. Of course I was applying to the business/econ program. I don't think your major really matters because there's a "one school" theory. In terms of financial aid, I don't know. Most of the students come here because of generous financial aid. However, I don't know about international students. I hope you know what you are getting into.</p>