<p>I am a sophomore in on of the top 100 schools in Texas. I am number 14/395 (3.5%) in my school with a GPA of a 4.0 unweighted. I am an active member in theatre and ITS (International Thespian Society) and am vice president of my ITS chapter, I have been in 6 plays as 5 leads, I am in my school's varsity theatre program, I am a member of NHS, I will be taking part in my schools speech and debate team, I have become a school mentor, and I take part in my schools science competition team. This year I took AP Bio (91), AP World History (90), PreAP Chem. (93), PreAP Algebra II (93), PreAP English II (93), Principles of business (98), Spanish III (97), and Varsity Theatre (100). My classes for next year are AP chemistry, AP physics B, AP US History, PreAP precalculus, AP English III, Oral Interpretation (speech/debate), Varsity Theatre II, and PreAP computer science. I took the PSAT and it gave me a range score of about 1800 without studying and the NMSQT gave me a score range of about 28-32 on the ACT. I plan on both of those being higher. I am also taking the SAT II biology subject test in June. With my so far credentials, what are my chances at schools like John's Hopkins, Georgia Tech, UC Berkley, and any ivy league school? </p>
<p>I also have 100+ hours of community service already and plan to get more. </p>
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<p>Your chances are average right now. Your PSAT score is unremarkable so you need to work to improve. I got a 1700 on the exam which kinda sucks too lol, and I enrolled in a prep. Your course rigor is very good, but I don’t advocate biting off more than you can chew. You got average scores with only 2 AP classes. If you double that, your score in those classes could very well fall into the low to mid 80s. So be careful. I’m not going to chance you because you do not have any test scores, but your ECs look very good. Your participation in school could separate you from the boring 4.0 GPA and 2000 SAT applicant. Colleges want people who will interact with students on campus and you have that!</p>
<p>NMSQT is PSAT. It does not project your ACT score. It is PLAN that estimates your ACT range. It seems you may do better in ACT. If you do want to apply to top schools, you do need to go beyond the projected range in ACT. </p>
<p>Are the grades in those AP classes boosted with ten points or natural grades? If they’re natural, you did very well. If they’re boosted, the college will know that and recalculate your GPA without the extra weight. </p>
<p>They are natural. </p>