Please don't laugh, stats that would make you cry, honestly

<p>Alright, here goes, what are my chances for university of ct, bu, northeastern, university of pittsburgh, penn state, temple, drexel
Don't laugh please.
GPA: all unweighted
9th grade: 2.75 (private school)
10th: 2.85 (private school)
11: 3.64 (public school)
12: 3.73 (so far) (public school) </p>

<p>AP's:
US history: 4 730 SAT 2
Biology: 5 700 Bio M SAT 2</p>

<p>Future AP's
Microeconomics
Statistics
Psychology </p>

<p>SAT: 1990
660 Math
670 Crit Reading
660 Writing</p>

<p>EC's:
FBLA, Officer, VP 2 years
Student Tutoring: 4 years 150+ hours
Key Club: Event chair
Newspaper: News editor
Hospital Volunteer: 100+ hours
Cultural Club
Engineering Club: Fuel cell team </p>

<p>And my problem that seems to kill me.
My class rank is low, by low I mean top 57%. The problem at hand is that the first two years of highschool were in a unranked environment. My public school kind of just threw me into their system once I transferred. So my rank is only accurate to a 33% mark and is clearly inaccurate as I managed to rise 20% in just 2 semesters. Of course, this was the best I could do dragging that iron gpa from fresh and soph years.
Am I aiming too high? Too low? Just right?</p>

<p>Since I'm personally attempting to ignore rankings period I don't have a lot of advice on the subject.
However I've read from a lot of people that a improving gpa such as yours can be nearly as impressive as a consistent one. Hopefully admission advisers will take that into account when looking at your ranking too.</p>

<p>I think you are in at Northeastern, Temple and Drexel. Decent chances at BU and maybe UConn. The 2 hardest IMO will be PSU and UPitt. You have a nice upward trend and good scores and ecs. You will be fine. If you are interested in engineering you may want to check out Manhattan College, WPI and RIT. Good luck!</p>

<p>PSU University Park and Pitt will be very tough. I think you will get into the rest.</p>