recommend me some random colleges plz

<p>3.3 uw
3.46 or 3.5 w(not sure,i have to ask my counselor if a class i took,Japanese 3,really is regular or honors)</p>

<p>taking 3 AP's my senior year(AP English,Japanese and Enviro.)they will be my only APs.I've only taken honors and regular classes.</p>

<p>act now:24
projected ACT when i take it on September 15 :27</p>

<p>ec's: 4/10(not much)</p>

<p>really good essays though</p>

<p>what are you looking for in a school?
what part of the country do you want to go to school in?
is there a specific major you are interested?
is cost a major factor?</p>

<p>1.what are you looking for in a school?
2.what part of the country do you want to go to school in?
3.is there a specific major you are interested?
4.is cost a major factor?</p>

<p>1.medium sized population.lots of things surrounding the school(movies,restaurants etc).
2.anywhere
3.i'm undecided
4.yes</p>

<p>try ithaca college in new york (probably high match for you if you get your ACT up)
they have great financial aid packages, assuming you qualify. </p>

<p>also, Roger Williams in Bristol, Rhode Island would be a good low match/saftey
unsure about their financial aid but you could get a merit scholarship if you can get your ACT score up. </p>

<p>some reach schools: Syracuse University, Providence College, Stonehill College (I've visited, have a large endowment and they would probably give you a great financial aid package).</p>

<p>I second Ithaca College. The campus is beautiful, and assuming that your essays are good, you could probably get in. </p>

<p>How about Barry University for a low-match/safety? Or DePaul? Salve Regina? Old Dominion? You'd have a pretty good shot at any of those. </p>

<p>And Chapman could be another high match, as well as Saint Louis U.</p>

<p>Dear Tomato King:</p>

<p>I gather you have not ripened yet.
Well, you may not be picked.
Humor me some more.
Perhaps a little sunshine?</p>

<p>You could get out of bed and go to your local junior college.</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=377931%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=377931&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>You have to know what you want from college first! Read my long post that I don't want to repeat again, and figure out your Important College Criteria. Then ask us again. We can recommend hundreds of schools for you, but we would be more helpful if you had a better idea of what criteria are important.</p>

<p>Here's what I have to say to you about medium-sized colleges (I take this from Winning the Heart of the College Admissions Dean by Joyce Slayton Mitchell):</p>

<p>"Thinking about size, don't cut your initial possibilities too quickly by size. Numbers don't always tell the truth. Many juniors come in and say, 'I want a medium-sized college, one with around five or six thousand students.' Look through the guides and you will see that the majority of American colleges are small liberal arts colleges or big state universities. Stereotypes can be very deceiving. Big Wisconsin, Texas, and UNC at Chapel Hill students are not all numbers! The students on those campuses relate to each other and to their professors, and quickly break into small manageable friendship groups through living and learning groups and their special interests. A big university soon breaks down into friends from your sports team, music and theater groups, dorm-floor pals, suite-mates, sinkmates, political science class, lab partner or freshman seminar, so that you are not dealing with the whole university at once. The size of your high school has less to do with the ideal size of your college than your personality and what adventures you are ready for. Sure, you may have to take more initiative with that student-to-faculty relationship at a large school, but loads of eighteen-year-olds are ready for and capable of that! If a 'family' community is important to you, think two thousand students and under. If diversity, high energy, and big-time sports are important to you, think over ten thousand."</p>