Is this list reasonable?

<p>Brown
Amherst
Harvard
Columbia
Stanford
Tufts
Pomona
Skidmore
SUNY Geneseo
Wesleyan
UC Berkeley
Whitman
UC Santa Cruz
UC Santa Barbara
UNC Asheville</p>

<p>(in order of preference, roughly)</p>

<p>Are there any similar schools I should apply to or is this list already long enough? I really like all of these schools...</p>

<p>What do you plan on studying college?</p>

<p>I'm not really sure so I need a breadth of options. Probably something involving the natural sciences (specifically human physiology).</p>

<p>I think so, based on the possibility for you to be accepted</p>

<p>Hard to say whether it is reasonable without knowing your stats, but it certainly contains a range of schools in terms of size, location, and selectivity. Looking at it I assume that you are a California resident? If so, I don't really see the point of SUNY Geneseo. Which of these schools do you consider matches?</p>

<p>If you hsve a 2200 plus and are in the top 10% of your class, it looks like a good list.</p>

<p>In terms of the actual nature of the schools, Columbia and Harvard don't really belong on that list. They are HUGE universities, of which the undergraduate population is but one part (in both cases, ~6000 in universities of ~21,000).</p>

<p>They are also more urban, with all the promises and pitfalls that entails--especially Columbia.</p>

<p>Reed and Haverford would both fit in better on that list than Columbia and Harvard.</p>

<p>Here are some schools to look at:
Agnes Scott (if you're a woman), Albion, Austin, Baylor, Brandeis, Carleton, Colby, Cornell, Drexel, Duke, Guilford, Harvard. Haverford, Howard, Illinois Wesleyan, Indiana, Johns Hopkins, LSU, Loyola-Chicago, MIT, Mount Holyoke, Ohio State, Pomona, Reed, Rice, Siena, Swarthmore, Temple, Texas A&M, UC-Davis, UChicago, UDallas, UDelaware, UDenver, UNew Mexico, UPacific, Wofford, Xavier (LA)</p>

<p>Good Luck!</p>

<p>Pomona and Harvard are the best choices for natural sciences on your list!</p>