<p>Stats:</p>
<p>4.0 GPA
5.1ish weighted GPA
11 APs</p>
<p>Junior Year (I got a 5 on all exams)
-BC Calc
-US
-English
-ENV
-Psych
-Chem</p>
<p>Senior
-Government
-Stats
-English
-Physics C
-Comp Sci</p>
<p>SATs (Best Scores)
800 M
800 R
770 W (perfect on multiple choice but I got an 8 on my essay)</p>
<p>My Recs and Essays are strong and my EC are fairly average (President of a couple clubs, Governors School, etc.)</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>Your stats seem strong but you need to give more context for others to adequately ‘chance’ you; stuff like school size, location, ethnicity etc. would all be relevant…</p>
<p>Assuming your Subject Tests are just as strong as your SATs though, and everything else is decent, you’ve got quite a good chance for ED. Good luck.</p>
<p>“770 W (perfect on multiple choice but I got an 8 on my essay)”</p>
<p>That would give you an 800. I really question this.</p>
<p>"“770 W (perfect on multiple choice but I got an 8 on my essay)”</p>
<p>That would give you an 800. I really question this."</p>
<p>The way the SAT is scored changes for each administration of the test. For instance, I got a 770 in math with one question wrong and none omitted, while friends of mine have received 780 or 790 with the same raw score. It’s possible that the scoring guide you’re thinking of gave an 800 for that situation, but other tests might give different scores.</p>
<p>(Also, is there no “Quote” function on this site, or am I just looking in the wrong places?)</p>
<p>Actually, I had perfect multiple choice and an 8 on my essay and it went down to 750…
I’ve read that Brown only cares about the essay of the Writing section; is that true?</p>
<p>arbitrary: there is a quote function. </p>
<p>[ quote]what you are quoting[/ quote]</p>
<p>Just leave out the spaces.</p>
<p>Heart: I’ve never heard that Brown only cares about the essay score. I’m sure they look at everything.</p>