<p>Non-traditional, urm, cc student here.If I have 40 credits (4.0 gpa) completed by the time I apply, how much will my hs transcript and SAT be looked at it? 2.8 hs gpa, 1440/2400 sat Should I retake the SAT? Here are some schools I'm looking at:</p>
<p>NYU
USC
GWU
U Miami
Johns Hopkins
Yale
Emory
Vanderbilt
SUNY Binghamton, Geneseo
UPitt
Pepperdine
Cornell
Brown
UNC
UVA
Columbia GS</p>
<p>FOR ANY OF THOSE SCHOOLS 1440 SAT is MUCH too low…</p>
<p>like especially the ivys you got there, u would need 2200+ ish to get in iunless you have a strong hook.</p>
<p>so definitely try to bring it up to at leasr 2000+ for any of them…
with 4.0 gpa at a community college you will be appliying as transfer? or as first year again?
if its transfer it would be harder esp since ivys have started to take in less and less transfers.
anyways good luck</p>
<p>SUNY- BINGHAMPTON, GENESSO are the only schools that are in reach for you. Don’t even bother applying to the other schools. find some safeties</p>
<p>Unless you can raise your SAT and gpa significantly, you won’t get admitted to the majority of those schools. They generally get more near-perfect applications than they can admit. Even being a urm won’t do it because they see better numbers than yours from every kind of urm there is. I’d follow kmac’s advice and find some schools where you’ll have a chance of admission and academic success once you get there. GOOD LUCK!!!</p>
<p>Guys I think he is asking about transferring.</p>
<p>NYU, USC, GWU,JHU, UMiami, Brown, Cornell, Pepperdine, and UNC don’t require SAT scores. Emory doesn’t require HS transcript if you obtain 60 credits, along with UMiami, GWU. Vanderbilt has a VERY high transfer rate. Take this into consideration.</p>