<p>white male from the great state of Connecticut</p>
<p>3.75 unweighted GPA (first quarter senior grades AP History A-, AP Calculus A-, British Literature Honors A)</p>
<p>ideal grade progression</p>
<p>1370 and 2070 on the SAT</p>
<p>15/190 class rank</p>
<p>All honors classes and 3 out of the 5 AP classes my schools has </p>
<p>I am a Wesleyan High School Scholar. Every other day I leave school and take "Principles of Chemistry I" there. I was accepted again for next semester, and I am taking "Principles of Chemistry II" next semester. I finished the course with one of the higher grades in the class with an A-/A. I am hoping they consider this because obviously Wesleyan is one of the best schools in the country, and it proves that I can succeed.</p>
<p>~40 hours of community service (probably the killer here)</p>
<p>Time Magazine's 2006 Person of the Year</p>
<p>Founder, former president, former vice-president, and current secretary/treasurer of the "Support Our Nation" Club</p>
<p>Founder and vice-president of the Tutoring Club</p>
<p>President and former treasurer of the International Culture Club</p>
<p>What? No way? I thought I was Time Magazine's 2006 Person of the Year! UGH! Now my whole life is ruined!</p>
<p>Really though, you've got a good chance at Wake Forest and a tougher chance at Boston College. It's definitely possible though. Taking classes at Wesleyan is definitely a boost. Good luck!</p>
<p>BTW, I think it's really cool that your school offers British Literature as a class!</p>
<p>How are you Time magazines 2006 person of the year? Don't they reserve that for celebrities and millionaires? I've never heard of a student being named that. Anyways, you don't have a great chance. I only say this because the top kids in my class who applied there early (all three of them) all got deferred. Great SATS, rank, GPA, founded charity programs and heads of tons of clubs and they still got deferred. Apparently it's really hard this year, the most applicants ever.</p>