<p>upcoming senior. a California resident. Asian American. play tennis for my school. active member of the Key Club and CSF in my high school. approximately 150 hours donated to community service(library, hospital, and club work).
So far, 4 AP classes taken. 2 Honors classes
Next year I'm taking 4 APs, 1 Honors</p>
<p>GPA
9th 3.2/3.6
10th 3.6/4.0
11th 4.33/4.6 </p>
<p>What are my chances at schools such as ucla, ucsd, ucd, uci, and ucsb?</p>
<p>whoops I have yet to take my SAT IIS. but i got 1780 (570 CR, 540 W, 670 M) on my first SAT, I took the June 6 test and am expecting a somewhat better score.</p>
<p>UCLA - High reach
UCSD - High reach
UCD - Reach
UCI - Reach
UCSB - Reach</p>
<p>Get at least a 1900 and you'll have a shot at all of them besides LA and maybe SD.</p>
<p>I think you're in most middle tier UC's.</p>
<p>It seems to me that your SAT scores are a bit weak for the better UCs (top three imho are berkeley, la, San diego). Davis and Irvine are def. <em>possible</em> for you...Santa barbara as well, if you either get stellar scores on your SAT IIs and/or score higher on the SAT. I would shoot for above a 2000 (i know, its a big improvement, i'm rooting for you!) because that would place you pretty high up on the percentiles (obviously above 2100s would be optimal, but i think it is definitely possible for you to improve around 250 points)</p>
<p>gradeswise you seem to improving a lot which is definitely good. great math score but your writing is barely above average (which is around 500) and weak for the UCs. CR is alright, could be better.</p>
<p>it would be great if more info was given such as SAT II scores, which classes u took an AP/honors in, class-specific grades, what level of tennis, class rank, etc. I live in California too and if you feel that it isn't infringing on your privacy, knowing what school you went to (or at least the district or similiar schools if ur paranoid) would be helpful as the competitiveness of the school is definitely a factor. at least a description is recommended.</p>
<p>what's cool (and not cool) about the UCs is that they sometimes have <em>really</em> random admits and rejects, so keep that in mind and if ur very interested in the UCs then apply to more than one. It should also be noted that the UCs vary widely in school characteristics, like size, location, departmental specialties, etc.</p>