UNC Chapel Hill, any hope?

<p>Currently a freshman at private two-year in Boston.
1st semester 4.0</p>

<p>English Composition A
Financial Accounting A
Quantitative Analysis A
Intro to Business A
First year Seminar A
3 transfer credits for scoring a 5 on AP French test</p>

<p>2nd semester in progress ( I expect close to a 4.0)</p>

<p>English Composition and Literature
Financial Accounting II
Macroeconomics
Statistics
Visual Art</p>

<p>My father attended UNC but did not graduate there. My uncle, grandfather, and great-uncle all received some sort of undergraduate or graduate degree from there.</p>

<p>What are my chances?</p>

<p>UNCs not too hard to transfer into (~3.5 GPA) so I'd say you have a good shot at getting accepted, assuming your high school stats were halfway decent (1300+ SAT and Top 20% or better).</p>

<p>ehhh it is much harder to enter as a sophomore (~30% rate)</p>

<p>Yeah, defrasne's correct. If I were you, I'd try to transfer for the Spring semester of 09, because you have to spend one semester in CAS before you can transfer into the b-school. So basically, you finish your prereqs in the Spring, then apply for the Fall semester. Also, you need Statistics and Calculus to apply to the b-school.
UNC</a> Kenan-Flagler Business School : Application Process</p>

<p>That's a great idea... it's too bad though that UNC doesn't allow Spring transfers.</p>

<p>Really, that sucks. </p>

<p>Is there any reason why they don't take Spring transfers?</p>

<p>alright thanks. my act score is 27 so about a 1210 on the SAT and my high school gpa is not too stellar but we will see what happens</p>

<p>rejected.
niiiiiccee</p>

<p>Call the admissions office and ask them what you can do to improve your chances next time.</p>

<p>you didnt get waitlisted like everyone else? they actually rejected people?</p>

<p>it's hard to get in as an out of state-r.
i applied and got waitlisted as an out of state freshman (with higher stats than a LOT of my NC friends..), but accepted as a junior in state transfer.
good luck to you.</p>

<p>there are no two year private schools in boston.</p>