Please chance me for RD

<p>I know the GPA is a bit low…</p>

<p>I am a white male from one of the top ranked public schools in NJ:
GPA weighted: 4.0
SAT: 2150(CR:750, Math:710, Writing:690)
SATII: US History: 710, Bio: 680
AP Bio: 4
AP US History: 4
AP Chem: 3
Senior year: AP Lit, AP Stat, AP Enviro, AP Psych, Honors Spanish 5, Calc
(7 AP’s total, all honors except for math classes)</p>

<p>Four years varsity tennis, captain for 11th and 12th
Captains council
PGC (peer group connections) (11, 12)
President and founder of Habitat for humanity club at my school
Volunteer EMT
4 years of local tutoring program with inner city students
Good rec letters from two teachers and counselor (hopefully)
Good essay supplement
Summer service trips each year: habitat for humanity to Adirondacks, West Virginia with church, Dominican Republic this past summer
Harvard model congress
Youth ministry work
Century twenty one award 9th and 11th grade (100+ hours of service)
Tennis pro at country club for past two summers
Worked at ice cream parlor for two years </p>

<p>Any comments would be great!</p>

<p>Its pretty obvious you have a strong chance of getting in. Not sure why you’d make this post unless you want a bunch of strangers boosting your ego. I also do have other comments. 1. Your GPA is clearly not low, no point in saying that. 2. Don’t say you go to a highly ranked public school, you just sound snooty. 3. BC will wonder how you got a 710 on your Math SATs yet never took an honors Math, as in you clearly have the ability, you just chose not to challenge yourself. But overall as long as you refrain from sounding like an egotistical snob in your essays, then you have a very high chance of getting in.</p>

<p>i think you have a really good chance lol</p>

<p>Shanog2, while I’m glad you think my chances are so good, you’re mistaken with regards to my gpa. Its a 4.0 weighted on a 4.0 scale, which is below average for BC admissions.</p>

<p>Dear shiloh456 : As usual when I review a chance-me thread, I tend to be overly critical which is my attempt to force the applicant out of their comfort zone to challenge elements of their profile. Your particular profile has several elements that will be subject to that challenge.</p>

<p>Clearly, your Board Scores are within the upper half of Boston College’s Admissions Class and certainly could be top quartile for the Class of 2016. However, was this one exceptional testing or were your SAT II scores (in theory, your subject strengths) an outlier? Your AP scores (4) qualify for placement, but are these grades raising a flag? Why AP Statistics as opposed to AP Calculus, particularly given your advanced science curriculum? How about an AP History course to demonstrate a further element in your profile?</p>

<p>How low is your unweighted GPA? Are you in the Top 10% of your current class? This is a major point as 85% of accepted applications come from this Top 10% pool. (Side note : 96% of accepted applications are within the Top 25% and 99%+ are within the Top 50%.)</p>

<p>Let’s talk about leadership traits which are demonstrated here. Any particular roles (office positions) amongst your clubs? What leadership was required as Captain for the varsity tennis team? Now, tennis is a one season sport - what about the other two seasons? Were there other sports engagements? Club sports?</p>

<p>Anything in the arts to discuss? Music (chorus, orchestra, band), drama (plays), art?</p>

<p>Volunteerism is strong in this profile from an elements perspective, but what did any of these programs matter in terms of community impact? For example, can you define the long lasting impact of your service trips? These elements can play very favorably on a Boston College application if (and we repeat, if) the applicant can articulate the impact associated with the engagement.</p>

<p>Finally, I always challenge the “good essay supplement” statement - after all, how would you know? How many have you personally reviewed and against what criteria are you making that evaluation? Instead, did you answer the question “Why BC?” Remember, the purpose of the essay is to convince your reader that you make the freshman class better by your inclusion than your exclusion. If you can explain why you make the Class of 2016 a better environment and experience for other successful applicants, you will have cracked the code.</p>

<p>In closing, let me say that your credentials are outstanding and you certainly appear to be in Boston College’s sweet spot. That said, consider some of the questions raised here to pause in retrospection on your application.</p>

<p>Good luck and please let us know how your application is received.</p>

<p>Scottj, Thank you for the insight, you raised some interesting points that I will make sure to include in my application. I will certainly post my results when I get my decision.</p>