<p>I'm currently enrolled at a community college. I fooled around a lot in HS and was able to pull a 2.5 (No honors or AP). I did, however, get into a bunch of honors/AP for my senior year but was diagnosed with a brain tumor and had to miss out for months on end, therefore resulting in only a few classes on my HS Transcript as a senior (just average college preparatory). I've recently taken the SAT and scored a 2270. My GPA is 4.0 and I'm in the honors program as well as PTK. Although, despite the fact that I'm doing this well, I don't even think it will matter much because there seem to be users on this forum who have stats comparable to mine from TOP universities who are being turned down by the elite schools. Is there any hope for me?</p>
<p>I'd also like to go to medical school and match into an MSTP (MD/PhD program).</p>
<p>Most people will suggest completing the amount of credits necessary at your CC so that the schools you apply to won’t look at your HS stats much. This is usually around 30 credits or so (aka freshman year).</p>
<p>Yes, Kulakai had a point about the high school stats. If you are not lying about your stats then yes there is hope for you, I say transfer after you have the 30 hours stacked up you can transfer to an elite university. Write good essays, get the recommendations and make sure you have some extra curricular activities to lean on as well.</p>
<p>jefgreen, why do you make up all this crap? You’ve said in the past in different threads that you’ve had a 1900 something (on SDN), a 2200, a 490 in math, and now a 2270. Let’s see, since you posted about the 490 math yesterday, that would make it impossible for you to have a 2270 or a 2200. This is the first time I’ve heard about the brain tumor thing, which makes me doubtful. What’s the point of claiming something that didn’t happen or you don’t have?</p>
<p>Because it’s an utter waste of time for everyone on the board to give you a hypothetical situation when you’re assuming scores that you don’t have, and creating a symptom that will require medical support (assuming that you’re stretching the truth on this too). </p>
<p>A “chance” proposition exists with the knowledge that all figures are accurate, thus we can give you an accurate chance. By skewing such figures, distorting them past the constructs of reality, the hypothetical result is not applicable: there is no point chancing something that doesn’t exist.</p>
<p>You’ve also previously stated you had a 2.2 coming from HS, only 2 days prior to your original post in this thread. </p>
<p>If we must carry your SAT scores with doubt and suspicion, we are also forced to view your reported malignancies and GPA with a different lens. The process is distorted, and no rational view can be made.</p>
<p>Thus: Give your real scores, or at least be consistent in your stories. Creating false numbers is really just a waste of time; if you want to do that, at least say you’re “projecting” to get these numbers, and then include your most recent scores (the ones that we’ll judge)</p>