Class of 2019- Non-Auto Admission stats

<p>I'd really appreciate if the people who applied this year to UT Austin as Non-Auto admit (Top 7%) can post there stats here and post their updates as they get their decision.</p>

<p>I myself will apply to UT Austin as a Engineering major and I'm not in top 7% (Top 9) :( so i'd love to see that who got in with what kind of stats and who got rejected and why.</p>

<p>Thank you and Good Luck!</p>

<p>Idk why no one else has posted, but I got accepted as non-auto into Philosophy!</p>

<p>@MattTheKoala‌ would you mind posting your stats?</p>

<p>Does anyone know how important is the class ranking for UT Austin admissions? My son’s graduating class is 9 students and he certainly in not in the “top 10%”.</p>

<p>What are his chances for admissions? 3.6 GPA 32 ACT. OK ECs and good recommendations.</p>

<p>4.1weighted, top 18.5%, 2100 SAT(1410R+M)
(will have about 14 APs after graduation)
I thought I wrote some good essays
ECs aren’t great
I’m Asian
applying for ChemE and 2nd choice collegenatural science chem</p>

<p>Does anyone know if we can submit our 2nd semester transcripts and possibly SAT score for the upcoming January SAT? (I want to retake it)
Although they won’t be considered for admissions this month, will they be considered for people on the waitlist or scholarships or something? (I read a thread from a couple years ago in which people who were waitlisted said they sent their 1st semester senior transcripts)</p>

<p>Would I be able to send the SAT score or transcript in through the letter of appeal for UT? </p>

<p>On the letter of appeal I want to write that "the 3 times I took the SAT during my 1st semester of senior year really dazed me: I acquired scores above 2200 and even a score of 2290 once on practice tests I took over holidays, yet my scores on test day all tethered near a 2100. After receiving my SAT test booklet from my October 2014 test on December 15th, I realized that I all the questions I missed on the Math and Writing portions were ‘easy’ questions that I mis-bubbled on. This epiphany struck me like a lightning bolt. Not only had I already taken the December 6th SAT test, but also had I submitted all the documents for my UT Austin application, obstructing me from explaining my SAT scores. </p>

<p>With this new SAT score and your careful review, I hope to demonstrate that my consistent 2100 SAT scores were not due to under-preparation but rather to a prevailing feeling of anxiety during the real tests and a misunderstanding of why my scores remained static— I spent my extra time checking whether I did the questions correctly when I should have spent my time checking whether I bubbled correctly! "</p>