Have no idea what schools to look at

More specifically, the US has 1968 four-year public and non-profit private colleges, the vast majority of which you’d be qualified for. You have to narrow it down somehow. A list of stats is of little use to us without more information unless you just want people throwing out random schools willy-nilly.

College selection in a few easy steps:
[ul][]Sit down with your parents and have a discussion about finances. You need to know what you can and can’t afford. If you need schools with good financial or merit aid, that needs to be factored into account.
[
]Visit colleges in your area, even if you’re not that interested in them. Visiting a variety of colleges will help you figure out what you do and don’t want in your college. Big or small, suburban or urban, Greek life or none, and so on. What appeals to you (or doesn’t) when you visit a college?
[]Draw up a list of the factors that you consider important. Do you want an urban campus or a rural one? A large university or a small liberal arts college? Is a big athletics scene important to you? Do you want a campus where everyone lives on campus or where most people commute? Do you want to be part of a thriving Greek scene or avoid one? Is a big LGBT or religious community important? Do you prefer single-sex or co-ed? There are many other things you may want to consider.
[
]After you have your list of factors, draw up a list of at least 30 or so schools that meet most of your criteria. CC is helpful at this point; it has an excellent [search engine](http://www.collegeconfidential.com/college_search/). College Board’s [search tool](College Search - BigFuture | College Board) and [url=http://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/]IPEDS[/url] are also helpful.
[]Get as much information about your list as possible! Visit the colleges. Read books like the Fiske Guide or Insider’s Guide. (I personally find Princeton Review extremely hit-or-miss.) Ask for info on CC. Attend information sessions in your area in the fall.
[
]Narrow your list down to about 6-10 colleges. Be sure it has at has at least one or two safeties you can afford and a good mix of matches (50/50 chance of admission) and reaches (admission possible but unlikely).[/ul]

Finding a good safety school should be your first priority. It needs to be a place that meets ALL of these criteria:
[ul][]Admission is nearly guaranteed for someone with your stats
[
]It is definitely affordable
[li]You would be happy to attend[/ul][/li]Rolling admissions (the sooner you apply, the sooner you hear back) is a definite bonus for a safety school.

Many use a state flagship (UMD College Park, UVM, UT Austin, U Alabama, etc.) as a safety school. Others apply to non-flagship public universities as safeties (MTSU in Tennessee, WWU in Washington, George Mason in Virginia, etc.). Still others prefer private colleges where they’d receive large amounts of financial and/or merit aid.

Once you have a safety or two, you can start figuring out the rest of your list.

With your grades and curriculum, extracurriculars, and a 2050 SAT, you could probably get into a fair number of colleges. The top 30-40 universities and top 20ish liberal arts colleges (according to USNWR) would be unlikely, but you would have a decent shot at most other places.

@newjerseygirl98 gave some suggestions in the range you need to be considering – American, Case, Fordham, GWU, and the like. One could also add colleges like Trinity (TX), Rhodes, Occidental, Colorado College, Ursinus, Willamette, Santa Clara, Villanova, etc.

I recommend taking as rigorous a course load as you can handle next year. Your junior and senior years should be tough classes with good grades if you want to aim high for college.