<p>SAT-2400
SAT subjects
math II -800
Physics-800
10th grade-8.8
11th grade-80%
12th grade-75-80%
i have pretty good ECs(too lazy to mention)
Majors---Computer Science
Schools:</p>
<ol>
<li>Georgia Tech</li>
<li>University of Illinios Urbana Champaign</li>
<li>Carnegie Mellon University</li>
<li>Georgetown University</li>
<li>University of Chicago*</li>
<li>Cornell University</li>
<li>University of California Berkeley</li>
<li>Columbia University*</li>
<li>University Of California Los Angeles</li>
<li>University of Michigan</li>
<li>University of Washington Seattle</li>
<li>University of Texas-Austin</li>
</ol>
<p>*These give scholarship to international students..:P
Financial aid not required badly but will help.
P.S. I'm Indian</p>
<p>It is very hard to say without more context to your application. While your grades are good for many of the schools (10th and 11th grade years are equivalent to A averages in American grading), I am not sure how common it is for Indian students applying to American schools to have A+ averages. It is also good that 11th grade will likely be your best year because it is the most important for grades. I would say that you have a good chance with likely all but a few, and it is nearly impossible to judge Columbia and UChicago without a broader context of specific coursework, geographic situation, and a list of extracurricular achievements. </p>
<p>GA Tech: Low match/Match
UIUC: Low match/Match
CMU: Reach
Georgetown: Reach
Columbia: Reach
U Chicago: Reach (can you write stellar essays?)
Berkeley: Match (can you pay full freight?)
UCLA: Match (can you pay full freight?)
Cornell: Reach
UWA: Low match (can you pay full-freight?)
UMI: Match/High match
UT-Austin: Match</p>
<p>@Catria You do realize that this is an international student, not a student in the state of California. Admission will be more difficult to UCs than statistics suggest.</p>
<p>Full freight means full cost of tuition. This will be $60,000+ per year at some schools. UC Berkeley is tough for everyone who isn’t a California resident and with the likelihood of an average equivalent to a B average in America for 12th grade, we can’t say without know what your extracurricular activities look like. If you can write good essays and have done something worthwhile outside ordinary classes, something a competition or receiving an award for something, I think you stand a good chance with Berkeley. We just don’t know enough, and Berkeley cares about more than grades and test scores.</p>
<p>For UCs, the chances given depend on one’s ability to pay if one is out-of-state, let alone international. So, as long as one can pay full-freight, one’s residence status doesn’t matter (for UCLA and Berkeley specifically). But ask for financial aid at an UC and it will hurt any OOS applicant that isn’t a recruited athlete.</p>