<p>See Dartmouth’s Common Data Set, C9 Data: <a href=“http://www.dartmouth.edu/~oir/pdfs/cds_2013-2014_updated.pdf”>This Page Has Moved;
<p>25th percentile SAT: CR = 680, M = 680, W = 680</p>
<p>What that means is that 75% of Dartmouth’s admitted students had at least one of those scores, but not necessarily all of them. For example, a student who had a 680 in CR, could have had an 800 in math and a 750 in writing etc. So, currently two of your SAT subset scores are below Dartmouth’s 25th percentile. That doesn’t preclude you from being accepted, but to counter your lowish SAT scores, you’re going to need something special and unique in your application that your offering Dartmouth over applicants that have higher SAT scores.</p>
<p>It looks to be the same at Northwestern: <a href=“http://enrollment.northwestern.edu/common-data/2012-13/c.html#c9”>http://enrollment.northwestern.edu/common-data/2012-13/c.html#c9</a> and Notre Dame: <a href=“https://www3.nd.edu/~instres/CDS/2013-2014/CDS_2013-2014.pdf”>https://www3.nd.edu/~instres/CDS/2013-2014/CDS_2013-2014.pdf</a></p>
<p>UChicago doesn’t participate in the Common Data set, but I imagine their numbers are about the same as Northwestern, Notre Dame and Dartmouth – so all those schools will be high reaches for you</p>
<p>You seem to have a better chance over at UVA: <a href=“http://avillage.web.virginia.edu/iaas/cds/cds1314all.shtm”>http://avillage.web.virginia.edu/iaas/cds/cds1314all.shtm</a></p>