<p>I'm a rising high school junior, and I'm ready to begin my college visits. Will I get into Cornell? Here is my information:
Freshman Year:
Overall Average- 97.28 Unweighted (my school does not do GPA or rank)
-Highest amount level of classes available.
Activities- School musical, trumpet and piano lessons, girl scouts, French club, Gospel Choir, Community Theater, volunteering at church youth ministry, jazz band, grad band, full orchestra
Achievements- Class Academic Awards in English and French, Principle Trumpet at Area-All State, First Trumpet at All-County, Winner in local piano competition
Sophomore Year:
Overall Average- 97.57 Unweighted
-All honors and 1 AP class (highest available)
Activities- School musical, trumpet and piano lessons, VP of Key club, author for school newspaper, girl scouts, community theater, volunteering at church, full orchestra
Achievements- Accepted into a top tier summer music institute (will not say which to protect my ID, but I received a letter of recognition from a state assemblyman), Huge music scholarship (again, will not say which), First Trumpet at All-County
SAT: Subject Tests in Bio M (750) and World History (730)... I really didn't study for these, so I'm hoping to improve my scores with different tests next year. I also assume that I will score well on the SAT, because I'm a very good test taker. I have not yet received results from my AP tests yet. Also, my grades will be weighted at the end of my JR year, which will likely give me an average of about 102. My junior year includes all honors/AP classes, and I will become president of Key Club, an officer for the newspaper, and am planning on getting my gold award for girl scouts, plus keeping up all the other activities. Any input would be appreciated. Thank you! (:</p>
<p>It’s hard to say right now that you’re only a rising junior. YOu’re on the right track though. Get high SAT scores!</p>
<p>Cornell: Aim for 2150+/32+</p>
<p>Work on preparing for the PSAT this summer. Earning NMF always helps applications.</p>
<p>Continue to pursue your musical talents - having an exceptional ability counts tremendously in admissions. </p>
<p>Keep working hard in your classes - your junior year grades are the most important for adcoms.</p>
<p>Your chances at Cornell seem promising, although you still have more than a year of work remaining.</p>