<p>Unweighted GPA: 3.68/4
Weighted GPA: 4.32
In the top 12% of my class. (out of a class of a little less than 800 students)
Have been taking ALL honors classes and AP classes (4 APs senior year).
Involved in 4 extracurriculars: (as of end of senior year)
-synchronized swimming 4 years
-best buddies 2 years
-Model UN 3 years
-club for social change 2 years
Got 1 smallish award.
Volunteered at the library this summer.
ACT: 33
SAT comp: 2090 (but I am retaking it in the fall, shooting for a 2200-2300)
verbal: 670
math: 740
writing: 680
SAT subject: math-770 lit-710</p>
<p>APs (so far, up to junior year): APUSH-4, Eng lit-5, gov't-5, psych-5</p>
<p>I am a first generation immigrant from Asia, female--I obviously speak a different language fluently.</p>
<p>Sure, it's worth applying. No one here can tell you whether you're in or not, but your stats seem well within the range of the applicant pool. Smith looks at a lot more than grades and test scores, too--if you have good essays, recommendations, and interviews, those will help a lot.</p>
<p>I think your Math scores might be attractive from a holistic stsandpoint, even if SAT scores per se aren't being used in admissions, assuming your Math grades match up. </p>
<p>Because of its lack of breadth requirements, Smith gets a number of "oh good, I'll never have to take a Math class again" applicants. You'd bring a little balance.</p>
<p>While I don't think you're the proverbial slam dunk, I see no red or yellow flags in the profile you present. As Stacy says, essays, recs, and interview are important.</p>