what are my chances ?

<p>Hi, i am planning to apply to UT at Austin because
i am interested in their nursing program .
I am out of state (California), but my aunt lives
there, which is another reason .</p>

<p>My GPA 10-11 grade (no PE): 3.864, rank 48/654
My GPA 9-12 grade (no PE): 3.772, rank 80
(never took any AP courses)</p>

<p>I did not take the ACT but i took the SAT .
I scored pretty bad though:
Math:590
Writing:510
Critical Reading:480</p>

<p>i have extra curricular activities like class spirit performances
known as homecoming and battle and also do community
service hours all 4 years for key club .</p>

<p>i'd like to know where i stand . appreciate it .</p>

<p>thank you</p>

<p>dude, i think it’s gonna be pretty tough for you. right now UT has a huge load of people instate that are automatically accepted because of top 10% law. because of this, it’s harder for in state students to get into UT just because they’re not top 10, let alone an OOS. your SAT score is pretty low and your rank seems pretty low too. i would say slight reach but apply and if you get rejected, you might get in their CAP program. but definitely apply though. i’m no college admissions director that says you’re in or not. good luck!</p>

<p>^ CAP is only for instate I believe.</p>

<p>I agree with 123abc456, OOS admissions are MUCH tougher than instate, ACT Score for example in state it 25-28 middle 50% OOS is 28-31 middle 50% so it will be tough for you, I would definitely apply though, you never know what will happen, especially in the world of college admins</p>

<p>You have 0% chance if you don’t apply. I know getting in OOS is harder, but from what I’ve read around CC, it seems like it’s pretty much a crapshoot. Write great essays and that might help offset your scores. Good luck.</p>

<p>I think your chances are very slim since you are OOS and don’t have great stats. I’d say apply and if you don’t get in, move here with your aunt, attend ACC or another university that you can get into and then transfer. After being here for a year you should be able to establish residency (although that might depend on your dependency status with your parents) and that in-state transfer can really help your chances for admission, not to mention reduce your tuition.</p>

<p>yes, caps is only for instate students</p>

<p>Hi, I applied last month which is about a month and a half before the deadline
I am an out of state student.
I have a 91.5 gpa out of 100 which is like a 3.75 or 3.8 out of 4.0
I got a 2080 on my sat out of 2400 and a 1370 out of 1600
I have a 600 and a 630 on my SATII’s
I have good extracurriculars
But i am out of state, do i have a shot or should i give up all hope</p>

<p>Create your own thread and stop posting the same thing in multiple forums.</p>