<p>I am currently at community college in california. I have just entered and am taking summer classes, I can tell I'm going to get straight A's here.</p>
<p>My dream is to transfer into ILR at Cornell, hopefully for sophmore status, but if it doesn't work, them I'll do anther year of CC and try for junior status.</p>
<p>If the following are my stats, how good are my chances to trasfer into Cornell ILR next fall:</p>
<p>College GPA: 4.0
ACT: 30
Extra Curriculars:
~Financial Director of LB's Interior Design
~Started small Non-profit organization
~Web Consulting LLC start up
~Public Speaker at the Annual International Social Dynamics Convention in Florida
~Built Houses in Mexico</p>
<p>High School Stats:
GPA: 2.6 (yeah.....I know)
EC: Lots of clubs, and was one of the 4 recipients of school scholarship at high school graduation</p>
<p>What are my ILR chances for next fall, thanks.</p>
<p>at this community college, are you following cornell's ILR curriculum as close as possible? as in have you taken econ101 and 102...oh and make sure your credits would transfer to ILR!!! </p>
<p>i say it all depends on your application (essays, etc)</p>
<p>you'd be cutting it really tight with the high school record, I'd say no to a sophomore transfer. </p>
<p>furthermore, you have no real interest in ILR as in another thread you've posted that you're currently at Cornell and would like to apply to harvard or wharton as a junior transfer. This clear lack of dedication (with a record that won't suit Cornell) will likely get you rejected. To be honest, I'd look at other colleges.</p>
<p>I still maintain that it'd be a tough as a sophomore, you'd have to REALLY hide your HS record, either with exceptional essays, recs, EC's or a combination of the 3.</p>
<p>Tough sophomore year...it matters if your essays and recommendations are exceptional or not. Better chance junior year. </p>
<p>Your hs record is just such a large blemish you are going to have to step it up in college and show them that you are a different person. Great grades and passion permitting, I'd say that you do have a chance. You just have to remember there are lots of other transfer applicants and you have to standout from them.</p>