<p>I was wondering if I have a chance into getting into Harvard with these statistics?</p>
<p>Weighted:4.7
Unweighted:3.9</p>
<p>ACT:34
SAT:2300</p>
<p>AP Tests (got a 4 or 5 on all):</p>
<p> AP Computer Science
AP World History
AP European History
AP Statistics
AP English
AP Biology
AP Physics
AP Calculus BC
AP US History
AP Chemistry
AP Spanish
AP English
AP Macroeconomics / AP Microeconomics
AP Environmental Science</p>
<p>Clubs and Sports (at least 1-2 hours everyday during spring) (2 hours per week during fall)(2 hours per day during winter)</p>
<p> Math Team
BPA
Scholastic Bowl
iStem, Rocketry
Model UN
Speech Team
Tennis</p>
<p>Well, this is the Princeton forum. Try the “What are my chances?” section rather than posting on every Ivy. </p>
<p>But, your chances are okay. I mean, you seem like a competitive applicant, but most competitive applicants get rejected, so… Just work your hardest, write some strong essays, and I think you’ll get into a good school.</p>
<p>As indicated on your Harvard thread with the same title, please read the above post. Everything in it pertains to Princeton, as well. If you have a specific question about your chances, please re-post.</p>
<p>I have a question, though. How were you able to complete 14 AP classes by the end of junior year? Did you take five as junior, five as a sophomore, and four as a freshman? This seems like a heavy load, even for a top prep school.</p>
<p>^I’ll be graduating from a HADES, or top, prep school come this spring, and, if the OP does attend one, his testing schedule is do-able. Usually, prep schools don’t have actual AP classes. There are just a lot of really, really challenging courses that surpass the AP level in difficulty. It’s not uncommon for kids to take 3-4 AP tests during their freshman year, even if they have to self-study some material that the course did not cover.</p>