<p>I am british applicant. My gcse result very bad but my a-level: physics, math, chemistry, further math - A<em>A</em>A<em>A</em>
I'd like to apply ivy league but ivy League important for my GCSE results? my sat 1 score: 2200, sat 2: 720, 800, 720,
act score: 30, uk, from rochester independent college</p>
<p>You haven’t really explained what “my GCSE result very bad” actually means. What British universities could you get into with your scores to give us a comparison? Could you get into Cambridge or Oxford with your grades? If not, why do you think you would get into an Ivy?</p>
<p>With that grades you could easily be considered for Oxford or Cambridge. I’d say you have 40% chances of getting into Oxbridge, but it depends on what course you want to do plus what those 4 subjects are.</p>
<p>But even if you have those A levels, Ivy league will look at your SAT. They will completely ignore that you’ve spend two years getting those A levels but they would just look at the SAT.</p>
<p>And for an international student that SAT is on the weak side. I’d say you still have a chance though</p>
<p>My gcse:</p>
<p>Physics: A
Chemistry: B
Biology: A
Geography: C
Mathematic: B
Geology: C
Asteonomy: C</p>
<p>My a-level:</p>
<p>Physics: A*
Chemistry: A*
Math: A*
Further math: A*</p>
<p>SAT 1: 2200
SAT 2: Maths: 720
Physics: 800
Chemistry: 720</p>
<p>ACT: 30</p>
<p>I’d like to apply cornell, princeton, brown, harvard, yale… (</p>
<p>Ouch, too many Cs.
There are many great applicants with very few to no B or lower grades, and a lot of them get rejected.
If you have C because you are not good at it, then no.
Also ACT is too low.</p>
<p>@isaaknyuton - In other threads you wrote “I’m reading at the community college in California.”, and “Community college GPA : 4.0”. If you have take more than one semester of college classes, it is likely that you will be required to apply as a transfer applicant, in which case your odds of acceptance are much less than they would be as a freshman. You will need to check with the individual colleges to determine their rules.</p>
<p>Pardon me for being so blunt, but based on your posts here, irrespective of your academic credentials, I think your written English will need to improve significantly before any of these schools will seriously consider your application. They all follow a liberal arts curriculum, and the ability to be able to communicate effectively in English will be critical to your success as a student. You will be competing against large numbers of international applicants - both native speakers and non-native speakers- with excellent English language communications skills, and unless you possess some special hook, it’s unlikely you would be selected from this applicant pool.</p>