UCLA troubles! Help a girl out...

<p>Hey guys
I just finished my supplemental questionnaire for UCLA.
Please tell me whether I will be considered now.
How many people from the supplement get chosen?
Some of my friends with low stats even got supplements, are they even gonna get in or is this kinda like a scam haaha?
Like, How is UCLA gonna choose now and what percent of people who actually get the supplement GET IN?
If anyone has gotten a supplement, and been accepted it would be great if you can also give your input . Its a stressful time for UCLA hopefuls. Thanks and good luck to all(:</p>

<p>There are 44 views and no one can help me :frowning: I’m gonna go cry now!!</p>

<p>Hi newyorkmydreams,</p>

<p>Hope you are not stressing too much about this as what’s done is done. Some of my friends at UCLA got a supplemental when they applied and it worked out. No one has statistics on this, but you can look at this on the bright side: </p>

<p>If you got a supplement, that means they are still deciding on your case and have not made a decision to accept/reject…so there is definitely still hope you got in. In fact, if my stats were just OK and I got a supplemental I would consider it a blessing since that means UCLA is taking a good look at me. </p>

<p>good luck!</p>

<p>Here is what UC Berkeley says about their “augmented review”, I imagine it is similar for UCLA:
Augmented Review
If a reader concludes that an applicant is “close to being competitive for admission but whose application is particularly challenging or lacking essential information that would confirm for the reader that the applicant should receive a score likely to result in admission,” then the reader can refer that application to “Augmented Review” (AR).16 An experienced staff member, known as a “lead reader,” assesses the case and decides whether the application warrants AR or not. Applicants who are getting an AR receive a detailed questionnaire that collects additional information about the student’s background, environment, and readiness for academic work at the level expected of Berkeley students. They are also asked to submit letters of recommendation. Most applicants who have disabilities are also referred to AR; they get a different questionnaire that focuses on their circumstances.
The new material is read and scored. The AR score, which is on a different scale and uses additional criteria, is used instead of the original read score as the basis for admission or denial.</p>

<p>Okay thats good information. So at this point do they look at the stats or just the essays? Any other info? did anyone get in? What if your stats are not UCLA stats…but they still give you a suppelement. I’m so confused…HELP me… D:</p>