<p>Has anyone ever heard of a student entering Dartmouth early, as in, skipping their senior year of high school? I've been considering the idea at other schools, but they specifically state on their websites that it is allowed. </p>
<p>Also, if you apply your junior year and are denied, can you re-apply senior year?</p>
<p>I'm not a stellar applicant and I haven't even taken any SATs/ACTs/******* yet(rising junior)so I probably wont apply early. I'm just curious if the option is available.</p>
<p>If you will have have fulfilled your high schools’s graduation requirements before attending you can apply. The issue is whether you have exhausted the advanced classes and developed the ECs and leadership positions Dartmouth will want to see in only 3 years of high school. The competition from Boston is especially brutal–lots of legacies and students connected to the school.</p>
<p>Thanks for the response! When you say fulfilling HS requirements, does that mean I would have to double up in English junior year (every other subject is only required for three years)? I know that at Boston University they allow you to do sort of a dual-enrollment. You fulfill your HS requirements as a freshman in college and receive college credits at the same time; then you get your HS diploma sophomore year of college. Is this system exclusively for BU, or does Dartmouth and other colleges allow you to do this as well?</p>
<p>Then your chances are slim to none as far as being admitted.<br>
I would suggest using your junior year and senior year to build up your GPA (as your unweighted GPA will be important).</p>
<p>To my knowledge, Darmouth does not have an early admissions program where a student could skip senior year and enter Dartmouth. However, this is not to say that it has not been done. I am willing to bet $$ if a student was admitted after completing their junior year of high school they would be an absolutely stellar student in addition to bringing some extraordinary things to the table.</p>