<p>For SCEA, is it possible to get in with a 2150-2200 SAT Score with everything else good.</p>
<p>Possible, not probable. Then again, no one is probable except qualified URMS and RAs.</p>
<p>Given Yale's middle 50%, it's totally possible AND probable if everything else is in good condition. The range is 2100 - 2380 for that middle 50%.</p>
<p>At the same time we have to remember that roughly 15% of kids will be accepted so that means very probable candidates may not even make it in. Deference to the RD pool takes over from there where the chances are far more daunting. Keep courage, my friend. :p </p>
<p>College</a> Search - Yale University - SAT®, AP®, CLEP®</p>
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Then again, no one is probable except qualified URMS and RAs.
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<p>Where are your facts, hokem, or is this purely speculation?
Just curious. :)</p>
<p>^ That's mostly a common sense hypothesis, but I think 99% of CCers would agree that if you're African-American, Hispanic, or Native American or the coach at an Ivy has directly contacted you about getting a spot on a sports team, you have a much, much higher statistical chance of getting in. It's common knowledge.</p>
<p>You cannot combine the 25-75th percentiles of each category to get percentiles of composite scores. The range is likely much more narrow than that, but none is provided unfortunately.</p>
<p>^Well, yeah, guess you're right. The range may or may not be smaller but the idea is that his (or her) scores are within the average Yalie range. If NewYorkStateofMi would give us the breakdown, that would make things easier.</p>
<p>^^I'm sorry, hokem, I don't believe it's common knowledge. I never knew until I joined CC sometime my junior year. But people today are becoming more knowledgeable, which is good. I just didn't like the wording of "no one is probable except..." language. I get what you mean (and agree). But if you're a "qualified" anything then I think you are probable whether you have URM/RA status or not. That is why I needed facts specific to Yale, which I doubt provides such detailed information. How much of a statistical chance remains to be debated. Admissions isn't an exact science, or math, for the matter. You make it sound so. Which again I believe was not your intention, I think? Correct me if I'm wrong.</p>