<p>I'm sure this has been posted before but does anyone have the Ivy Transfer statistics? Also, with a 4.0 at a community college and a mediocre SAT (1260), how much weight does the SAT carry for a 2nd year CC student?</p>
<p>The only Ivys at which you will have a modest chance are Brown and Cornell.</p>
<p>because of the SAT?</p>
<p>Probably because you go to CC.</p>
<p>what is considered a community college? do you consider UVA as a CC? what about University of Toronto, Washington University in Seattle and Umichigan An Arbor?</p>
<p>is this a joke? U Mich is very far away from a CC. A CC is like a school that is called a community college in the first place, does not have any admissions, its open enrollment.</p>
<p>Personally I feel that acceptance rates are very missleading, but they can be helpful in some circumstances. </p>
<p>On average of the past few years for transfers Brown's acceptance is 27%, Cornell ~30%, Yale and Harvard between 3-5%, Princeton 0%, and I don't know about the other ones. No one really has that great of a chance when you just look at the numbers. </p>
<p>If you don't feel comfortable with your SAT or SAT II scores you can always take them again. Though the farther away from high school and the more other activities you have the less they will probably matter. </p>
<p>Of the two people I know that have applied to any Ivy League school (Yale) from a community college, they both got in. So it can be done if you, or your parents, are really "exceptional" people. </p>
<p>Have you been invovled with your school and/or community and had some leadership roles? Or do you have any extraordinary talent or passion for something?</p>