<p>Hi,
So my dream school is Brown, and my second dream school is Johns Hopkins. I need to choose one school to apply Early Decision to. But heres the problem:</p>
<p>During my junior year of college, a friend who was very dear to me passed away, and it effected my junior year GPA. I emailed my GC, and she tells me I should be around 13-15% of my class with a 3.7X unweighted GPA. That puts me at below 10%. Brown's most recent data shows that 93% of their students were at the top 10% of their class, which means that I would somehow have to ninja my way into the left over 7%. However, I don't really think thats likely, because I hear that the 7% is reserved for athletes, legacies, etc. Johns Hopkins on the other hand, has a much lower average gpa and class rank.</p>
<p>I might be getting cocky, but I really do think I have a good shot at JHU ED. But, Brown is my dream school. A lot of you guys are going to say "just follow your heart and go with your dream school!". However, my situation puts me in a tricky spot. Because my gpa is low, I actually have a better chance at out-of-state competitive colleges than in-state colleges, due to the holistic admissions process (ironic huh?). This means if I apply to Brown and I don't get in, it would significantly decrease my chances at JHU and other state schools for RD. I might be forced into my safety school. </p>
<p>So- do I play it "safe" and apply to JHU for a higher percentage of acceptance, or do I go with Brown? I've seen the Brown ED threads, and I believe that everything else besides my GPA is on par or better than a lot of the people who got in (probably just being cocky again). The question that I'm pondering is; If everything else is good enough for Brown BUT my gpa, will they reject me to reserve that 7% for hooked applicants, or would they forgive me for my junior year slip (one semester) and let me in, even though cases like me would lower the percentage of undergraduates who were at the top 10% of their class and decrease their prestige?</p>
<p>Of course, there is always the chance that I am way out of my league, and will get rejected no matter which I apply to. But I prefer to be optimistic. So, should I take the gamble? </p>
<p>PS- Please don't suggest applying for a less competitive ivy league. I don't WANT to go to Cornell or Penn. Or Yale or Harvard for that matter. And apologies for the grammar mistakes.</p>
<p>Former Chance-Me thread here if you're interested: <a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/college-admissions/1377009-chance-asian-low-gpa-really-specific-resume.html%5B/url%5D">http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/college-admissions/1377009-chance-asian-low-gpa-really-specific-resume.html</a></p>
<p>Thanks!</p>