<p>I have a 4.0 GPA, President of Future Business Leaders of America, Vice President of the Debate Team, and Vice President of the Class of 2011, and I have 300 Volunteer Hours at the hospital.</p>
<p>Very hard to say. You need to provide us with SAT I and II scores, AP classes taken at the bare minimum. All nonhonors and few a.p.s does not impress, even with a 4.0. Also, if you get an A In A.P. chemistry but get a 700 on the SAT II, it just shows your school is easy and colleges will see that in the secondary school report.</p>
<p>Cornell- The community college of the Ivy league lmao.
I know a kid who had around 1900 SAT’s and got in ( HE HAD A PRETTY AVERAGE APPLICATION IN THE OTHER AREAS)</p>
<p>Based on your Sats and APs, I would say probably Cornell (Hum Ec) and Penn (Nursing). I would have said Brown, but this year their selectivity increased dramatically.</p>
<p>Check out Columbia GS too while you’re at it.</p>
<p>^ I agree with kwu… if you just look at the average Standardized test scores for admitted students for the ivies, you’re way below (both SAT I and II). Can people please stop being so negative about Cornell and Penn? They’re both great schools and highly selective. Columbia all the way for me, but there’s lots of accomplished Cornell/Penn students out there.</p>
<p>McGill University is ranked 20 in the Times-QS World University Rankings. Your SAT I scores are within the minimum range necessary for admission, while your SAT II scores are significantly higher ([Applicants</a> from U.S. High School Programs (in the U.S.A. and other countries)](<a href=“http://www.mcgill.ca/applying/undergrad2009-10/usa/]Applicants”>http://www.mcgill.ca/applying/undergrad2009-10/usa/)). If you keep up that 4.0 GPA, I’d say you stand a good chance.</p>
<p>Getting funding for your studies might be the bigger challenge, since McGill is pretty stingy with FA for foreign students and its merit scholarships are very competitive.</p>
wait, hold on - not to hijack the thread, but is Penn Nursing regarded as something of a joke school? Is it nowhere near as selective as Penn CGS or something?</p>
<p>I ask because I just learned a cousin of mine went there and I’m curious now.</p>
<p>That is so untrue! I know tons of people who have gotten into top 25 schools with 1600’s-1900’s SATs, RD and with an average application overall. Do not discourage people this way, people should just apply. It’s likely that a top 25 school, even an ivy league, will want this kid.</p>
<p>I think the question is - why are you asking other people to do all the work for you finding information about schools, etc. I mean, you ask “Which IVY LEAGUE best fits me?” which is not the way to go about this… especially since none of us here know everything they could know about you that might go towards a decision (best judge would be yourself, then perhaps parents/counselor if you talk to them) and the majority of us plain out don’t really care and don’t have any inclination to care when you ask such a generic thoughtless question.</p>
<p>Do a little research on each school first… then come back and ask more specific questions. Or at the very least, list some personality quirks of yours, some things that interests you, what you want out of a school and then ask what school best fits you.</p>
<p>Possibly a state school at Cornell. Are you a guy? If so, Penn Nursing might work out. The class size is 100 kids per year, it’s really just a fringe program. They should just shut it down.</p>