<p>SAT II: Math IIC, Biology, Literature (haven't taken but all will be 700+) </p>
<p>AP Tests: Calculus AB (5) English Language (5) Statistics (3) World History (3),</p>
<p>Senior Year Classes: Calculus BC AP, Physics AP, Biology AP, Latin Vergil AP, English GT AP, Macroeconomics AP, Anatomy & Physiology, Government, Psychology, Teacher Aide.</p>
<p>Accomplishments and Extracurricular:</p>
<p>National Merit Semifinalist
JV Tennis (9-10)
Winners Circle (9-12) Organization promoting drug and alcohol-free students
Chess Club (9-12): Undefeated Champion all four years (been doing chess for long time)
Latin Club (9-12) Lots of Area, NLE awards
Junior Classical League (9-12)
Key Club (11-12): Reporter (12)
Underclassmen Honor Society (9-10)
National Honor Society (11-12)
Math Club (11-12)
Orchestra (JV 9, Varsity 10): Concertino Region Orchestra (2nd Violin section, Freshman Year)
Calculus Club (12)
Junior Engineering Technical Society (11-12): 2005 TEAMS Competition at UT Austin
Model United Nations (10-12): Recognition as China (Disarmament) at Baylor 2004
Technology Students Association (11)</p>
<p>Misc: Random stuff like interning at a medical lab, work volunter hours, regional summer engineering program..</p>
<p>What are your unweighted GPA and your class rank?</p>
<p>SAT I is good</p>
<p>why don't you just take the SAT II tests before you start spouting random numbers about how well you'll do. Theres a chance (maybe even a good one) you'll do as well as you predict, i'm not denying that, but you could have a bad day or get a test with one section that stumps you even on a subject you're excellent at, and yea...just don't mention those scores until you actually get them. If they are, in fact, above 700, they'll be fine.</p>
<p>Lots of multiple year ECs, just make sure your weekly hours dont add up to something unreasonable. One kid's "free time" was calculated by me to be 1.5 hours per day to eat and wash himself. Your ECs are good.</p>
<p>If you have a GPA and good IIs, you have a rather good chance of admission pending good essays, recs, and overall application cohesiveness.</p>
<p>top 10% is all I wanted to hear :D; your GPA is fine, whatever it is.</p>
<p>You'll probably be fine with having your scores get there. Just have them rush reported. They don't start looking at apps until mid november (2 weeks) because they have to spend all that time filing 2500 applications. Also, they are in general sympathetic to thigns like that, and understand your situation. In other words, don't worry too much they're not gonna give you ***** about it. Isn't there a september SAT II?</p>
<p>lol by good bet, I meant almost sure thing. But if I say that, I will get flamed by cornellies (y'know "because there is no sure thing for cornell")</p>
<p>People are going to give me **** for this, but I swear engineering admissions arent as cryptic as people think. High test scores, high GPA, diverse high school background, AP's, a few nerd clubs like Mu Alpha Theta, TEAMS (rock on, btw), and you are in. They don't care if you can play violin or feed the homeless, they just want kids who aren't going to fall apart in the middle of 293 or thermo and transfer out into the hotel school. They want people who truly have interest in engineering and will do research or work on project teams. You've got a good high school spread; they like kids who aren't pure nerds, you know, who can read and write and speak latin. I don't see how you couldn't get into engineering. But that's just my opinion; maybe in the last 2 years admissions really has become the big crapshoot that everyone has made it out to be....but i doubt it.</p>
<p>hm thanks everyone for your opinions. It'll give me a good idea of what to think about when I'm writing the essays and such. As for the other aspects, not much I can do about it now...heh. Thanks again all.</p>