Don't have a clue where to apply!

<p>To summarize my situation, I guess i'm what you call an idiot/slacker, I chose the path off having fun and partying rather than education, and am regretting it with the arrival of the season of college apping. My sat is low, and my gpa is lower, here are my stats:</p>

<p>GPA: 2.76 (weighted)
SAT: (1270/1600)/(1820/2400)
CR-630
Math-640
Writing-550</p>

<p>I've switched between two schools two times, so some of my classes are IB and some are AP
Those Classes are:
IB Chem
AP Bio
AP Gov
AP Psych
AP World
AP Calc
+ a couple of honors here and there, keep in mind my GPA is 2.76 so I havent done well in any of my classes.</p>

<p>Obviously, due to my subpar GPA, I don't really have or even qualify or any awards, as a substantial amount of them are based solely on grades. My only EC's are some sports, a little leader ship position in an economics/investing club and weekly volunteer service at a clinic for the disadvantaged. I definitely don't have any chance with any of the universities I wanted to go to, and I know community college is pretty much my only option at this point, but I have two questions:</p>

<p>1) Does anyone know of any good colleges out there that I may even have a moderate chance of getting accepted into.</p>

<p>2) If I did extremely well at a community college like Northern VA. Comm College (NOVA)would I even be able to transfer to a good college, such as Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland, William & Mary? I don't know if this would help me or not with Johns Hopkins, but I've done the CTY academic summer program for about 10 years.</p>

<p>And my interest is pre-med, and yes, I know I would have to have a good GPA for med-school.</p>

<p>Thanks for the help.</p>

<p>bump10char</p>

<p>You can get in to a lot of four year schools. There are a lot schools were you can get a good education that would accept you but you won’t be getting in to any elite schools.</p>

<p>You can transfer from community college to elite universities. If you plan on going to community college route, I would look for articulation agreements with four year schools you are interested in attending.</p>

<p>How much will your family pay each year? That answer will likely determine where you should apply.</p>