Which colleges should i be thinking about applying to with my stats?

<p>I've been putting a lot of thought into which colleges I should apply to but I decided to ask you all here at CC. Thanks for the advice that anyone has to offer.</p>

<p>Grades: 4.60 weighted, 3.93-3.95 unweighted. I’ve taken almost all honors/ap classes since freshman year and I’ve gotten 2 B's overall; one in in freshman year in enriched chem, the other last year in AP Lang. </p>

<p>Scores: 35 on ACT, I did badly on the SAT the first time I took it but I’m going to retake in 1 week, hopefully much better. 800/790/770 on SATII for math II, Chem and Us History. I've gotten 5's on all AP tests including Macro/micro, Chemistry, BC Calc, Us History, English Lang, and Us Gov.</p>

<p>Extra-Curricular: President of my schools investment club, math team 3 years (on a few state winning teams), 2 years on debate (a lot of placements in tournaments too), Played violin for 12 years including 4 years in local youth orchestras, 4 years of lacrosse (3 on varsity; there is a good chance I’ll be a captain this year), my team of four placed 2nd at the National Personal Finance Competition and we also won the state competition, national honors society and Spanish honors society, Illinois Youth and Government for 2 years (I was a lobbyist one year and a senator the next). </p>

<p>Senior year schedule: AP art history, AP Lit, AP bio, AP euro, AP psych, and Multivariable calculus.</p>

<p>Recs: I know I am going to get a good rec from my counselor and my AP us history teacher from last year. I also want to get a rec letter from my AP econ teacher but I took that soph year so I’m not sure if that’s ok. However, she did sponsor 2 clubs I did (youth and gov and finance competition).</p>

<p>Thanks to anyone who can give me some advice on where I should apply/ get in. I want to double major in philosophy and either math/econ (haven’t decided yet). If I left anything out, I can edit post or post in thread. THANKS!!!</p>

<p>Step outside. Take a good look of what is around you. That is your university.</p>

<p>Multivariable calculus in high school!? Apply to MIT…</p>