<p>Georgia tech, U of Pittsburgh, UNC-CHapel Hill, William and Mary, Mary Washington</p>
<p>UNC-Ch is difficult to get in OOS. Don’t know about the other schools. Wm and Mary might be difficult. I don’t think Mary Wash has difficult admissions. GT does like high stats students, so if you have those, your chances are probably good.</p>
<p>UNC-Chapel Hill, William & Mary prefer in-state residents.
Pitt, GTech and Mary Washington don’t give a crap about in-state or out of state. </p>
<p>UNC-Chapel Hill, William & Mary, GTech are very selective and you need around 1900+ SAT and 3.8+to have a decent chance. </p>
<p>For University of Pittsburgh, you need around 1800+ and 3.6+ GPA.</p>
<p>Mary Washington requires 1600+ and 3.3+.</p>
<p>Pitt makes a concerted effort to recruit students from OOS. Pitt’s average SAT for accepted students is 1380 (they only look at math and reading) and a B+ GPA. However with Pitt, the earlier you apply, the better your chances. They have rolling admissions.</p>
<p>what about UVA?</p>
<p>UVA is similar to UNC-CH</p>
<p>they prefer in state?</p>
<p>By Virginia law, W&M and UVA limit the number of out-of-state students to 35 percent of the student body. The number of out-of-state slots is filled each year. I don’t know whether the same limitation applies to every VA public school. At V-Tech, OOS students make up about 26 percent of the student body; at Mary Washington, it’s 25 percent. At least at Mary Washington, they’d like to increase the number of OOS students, who pay considerably more in tuition. [Decline</a> in out-of-state applicants](<a href=“Keluaran Data HK, Pengeluaran Data SGP, Togel Hongkong, Togel Singapore Hari Ini”>Keluaran Data HK, Pengeluaran Data SGP, Togel Hongkong, Togel Singapore Hari Ini) </p>
<p>North Carolina limits the number of out-of-state students at UNC-CH to 18 percent (unless that’s changed recently). </p>
<p>It’s not easy to suss out the differences in admission rates and stats for instate vs. out of state students. The common data set doesn’t require it, for one thing. However, 12 years ago, when my oldest d was applying to schools, the W&M admitted student profile did show that out-of-state students had an average SAT score about 100 points higher than in-state students. I have no idea whether this still applies.</p>
<p>You need more than a 1900 to get into UNC out of state. UNC does post OOS SAT scores. The OOS average is 1330/1600 and 1990/2400 and those averages do not reflect what it really takes to get into UNC OOS. Look at my link. 44% of OOS freshman have CR/Math SATs at 1400 and up. 65% of OOS are at 1300 and up.</p>
<p>[First-Year</a> Full-Time Undergraduate Student Profile, Fall 2012 - Office of Institutional Research and Assessment](<a href=“http://oira.unc.edu/first-time-freshman-class-profile-fall.html]First-Year”>http://oira.unc.edu/first-time-freshman-class-profile-fall.html)</p>