<p>id say there all matches other than penn and cornell for u, cornell is a reach/high match and my take on upenn is that its just a crapshoot-good luck with it tho</p>
<p>Anyone else? </p>
<p>Thanks btw for all the chancing so far!</p>
<p>bumpppppppp</p>
<p>Returning the favor.</p>
<p>NYU-match
Cornell- Low reach if you are applying to regular school, match if you are apply to one of their special schools (human ecology, Hotel management etc.)
Upenn-Reach
CMU-Match
UChic- Low reach
NW-Low Reach
JH- High match to Low Reach</p>
<p>Not to familiar with UC's.. But i'm pretty confident you will get into one of those Low reaches if you apply to all three.</p>
<p>Bump! Anyone else?</p>
<p>bummmmmmmp</p>
<p>bummmmmmmp</p>
<p>NYU-in for sure
Cornell- High Match
Upenn-High Match
CMU-In
UChicago- High Match
Northwestern- High Match
JHU-High Match
UC Berkeley-in
UCSD-in
UCLA-in</p>
<p>You will get into at least one high match for sure. Maybe even all of them. You are a great candidate for them, but so are many other people.</p>
<p>and quit bumping</p>
<p>From what I have seen happen this year, you are likelier to get into Cornell as a legacy than Berkeley as in-state. 3.8, 2100 is no longer a match for Berkeley.</p>
<p>UCLA, UCSD, NYU - in
Berkeley, UChicago - high match
Cornell - possible because of legacy
UPenn - reach</p>
<p>O.o Really? Berkeley? I have seen people with 2000 SAT scores get in with good GPA's and top 10% ranking. </p>
<p>By the way, my SAT score is now around a 2180.</p>
<p>xD Still a high match?</p>
<p>Don't worry too much. You may very well get in, since they look at EC's and the difficulty of the course load, and your weighted GPA is great.</p>
<p>I am only saying that UCB is not an easy match. Looking at Naviance for my D's public school full of over-achievers for the last 3 years, 160 applied, 60 were accepted. A whole bunch of people (at least 20) were rejected with weighted GPA's between 4.0 and 4.4 and SAT's around 2200.</p>
<p>Wow, what was the ranking for a lot of these people? Was it atleast top 10%?</p>
<p>The school does not rank. I just took a quick look at the graph, and basically some people with lower than average stats made it, while some people with higher stats didn't. Some who didn't get into Berkeley, got into higher ranking private schools, including Cornell.</p>
<p>I think you have a good shot at all the schools on your list, just don't count on any particular one.</p>
<p>That's odd. Berkeley has taken only the top 10% from our class in the past, so hopefully I won't get rejected (our school claims to not rank, but they [only] provide the UC's with the information). </p>
<p>I would be PERFECTLY fine with getting into Cornell and not Berkeley. Hahaha, that'd be a miracle for me.</p>
<p>Anyone else?</p>
<p>Hey aqua! mm your stats are similar-ish to mine -- I think I'll get a higher SAT scores but my ECs are kind of weaker. Do you think it'd be a waste of money to apply to Irvine/Davis/SB (for you)?</p>
<p>I wouldn't apply to those. They're safeties that I doubt I'd attend. I might apply to Irvine as the lowest safety that I apply to. Hahaha. I definitely would not even think about SB or Davis.</p>
<p>Thanks. :) I'll just pick one of the three, then. I'm definitely trying to control my app fees.</p>
<p>On second thought, your major should probably be taken into account. If you want to do agriculture, then you probably SHOULD apply to Davis as a safety.</p>
<p>
[quote]
Cornell I know will accept pretty much anybody with high standardized test scores (2200+), but UPenn is more competitive I think
[/quote]
</p>
<p>To debunk the above statement:
I scored in the 2300s on the SAT -- I was accepted at Penn and waitlisted at Cornell.</p>