<p>You have a good chance in my opinion, seeing that your senior year grades are good, GPA trending upwards and your SAT rose 100 points. I think the effort you put in to get things going just might do it. I would email admissions about how much you want to go, about how hard you have been working to make that happen.... Mention that you want to be sure they see your improvement in grades and SAT scores. Make it personal for them so you are just not another applicant.</p>
<p>The chances are weak for admission to Florida State since you are already wait-listed. </p>
<p>You are doing the right thing by improving your SAT and GPA. This is great, and shows your commitment to the work to be done. Fortunately, you are already admitted to the other schools - congratulations!</p>
<p>If you are not admitted but still want to attend Florida State, go to one of the other schools and continue to apply yourself as you have demonstrated. Consider transferring later. An alternative would be to go to Tallahassee Community College (a feeder CC for FSU) for a while, which would give you the environment and social areas closer to FSU.</p>
<p>Well, I had two friends who were deferred last year because they had sub-1000 test scores. After they went over the 1000 mark, they were accepted. Considering your upward GPA trend and the fact that you improved your SATs by over a 100 points, I think you will be admitted. Good luck buddy</p>
<p>Based on last year, if you were deferred for scores and raised them, and you had a decent GPA with a rising trend and a good senior year, you had a good chance of getting an admission later. That is why I think you have a chance. They must have seen something else they liked. You did not get a rejection. </p>
<p>This year is more competitive, so it depends on who else raised their scores and by how much. Hang in there.</p>
<p>The only thing that may affect you is the trickle down effect from the slaughter from the UF admissions.
Saw a LOT of high SAT students getting outright rejected with GPA's like yours.
See their "rejected with over a 1300 SAT" thread.
I'd have to say a lot of those kids are now choosing FSU.
The open spots are starting to get locked in.</p>
<p>To be honest, if those students already have an FSU acceptance from the first notification period, it is not going to affect those who get offers from FSU in March. There are always the students who apply to both and don't get a UF acceptance. And sometime vice versa. It is more about new applications in the second pool. FSU works the numbers, and each year has it figured on how many that are admitted actually accept the offer. It is more about how many really competitive students waited until late to actually apply to FSU. I would venture to guess that the students who did not get into UF with an SAT over 1300 already have their acceptance to FSU from the first admission cycle. And some of those will go out of state.</p>
<p>Hello, I’m currently in a community college here in nj. My gpa is about 3.0 and I’m currently involved in a program called SHH (STUDENTS HELPING HONDURAS) I’m trying to build a chapter here in nj. Well my question is how hard is to transfer there? My major is management. I also wonder if not having my parents decrease my chance. My parents live out of the country and since I was in high school i was very independent. I had to work pay for food, clothes,phone bill, living expenses, etc. So basically when i apply for financial aid I qualify as an independent student.My main concern is if i can get in because im really interested in going there.</p>