10th grade :
11th and 12 grade :
sat scores ( i mean new sat for 1600 )
toefl :
sat subjects :
APs (if needed ) :
extra curricular activities : ( please dont mention international olymipads and sports . apart form that like courses , services etc)
please fill that form . i need a perfect chance to get seat in universities like mit , princeton ,stanford etc
There is no perfect formula. Very, very high test scores and grades, exceptional recommendations are needed for sure. Some unusual, in depth extra curricular activities, or national level performance in more common ones. And then you have about a 5% chance after all that.
If your family can pay, you would have a lot more choices among American colleges.
Make a plan that includes alternatives other than gambling in the very slim chance of getting into one of those top US colleges as an international.
This doesn’t exist shy of having a relative donate $15 million. If you read the colleges’ evaluation criteria, you’ll see the holistic range allows them to craft whatever students they define as excellent. To think it’s simply 3-4 scores or GPAs shows extreme unfamiliarity of how top US colleges admit students.
There are no guarantees for admission at the top institutions. It is even tougher for international applicants. However, if you contact the counselors at the EducationUSA Advising Center that is closest to where you live, they will be able to help you determine which colleges and universities you do have a likely chance of being admitted to. There are quite a few centers in India: https://educationusa.state.gov/find-advising-center?field_region_target_id=&field_country_target_id=306&field_center_level_value=All
Can’t be done. Your chances are very, very, very small. There are probably only a handful of people in the world who have an excellent chance - assuming they have decent grades and scores. They’ve done things like win the Nobel Peace Prize or had a parent who was president of the United States. All the universities tell you what they are looking for. You can look up Common Data Sets for most universities and get an idea of the grades and scores of admitted students. But grades and scores are not enough for selective universities like the ones you mentioned.
[url=<a href=“http://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/there_is_no_formula%5DHere%5B/url”>http://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/there_is_no_formula]Here[/url] is what MIT has to say about the way to be sure of getting in to MIT and [url=<a href=“http://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/applying_sideways%5Dhere%5B/url”>http://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/applying_sideways]here[/url] is where they tell you how to do it.
You will probably think ‘no, that’s just stuff they say’, but there are MIT interviewers here on CC who will confirm it.
In general, you want to be in the top few % of your cohort (in terms of grades and scores), to be in with a chance- but that is a baseline, NOT a guarantee.