Will It Be A Miracle?

<p>Hello, I am an african american student attending keystone college in La Plume,PA.
I would like to know will it be possible for me to transfer to Brown university, Cornell University, Emory University, NYU,Pennyslvania University,North Carolina University, Vanderbilt University, and Notre Dame University with these stats:</p>

<p>HS: GPA=2.5 overal
ACT= 24
HS EC's= Track and field, volunteer at hospital, church, organizations, and
Elemaentary school.
Awards: Scholarship award, french award, and made honor roll junior and senior years</p>

<p>When college came, I really got on top of things: College stats:</p>

<p>College: GPA= 3.5 overall
EC's=
Toast masters club
Christian club
American heart association(30 hours)
American cancer society(30 hours)
Alzheimers association(30 hours)</p>

<h1>1.Hospital volunteer(200+ hours)</h1>

<h1>2.Hospital volunteer(50+ hours)</h1>

<p>Meals on Wheels(30+ hours)
Veterans Medical Center(30+ hours)
National Kidney Foundation(30+hours)
Mental health Association(30+ hours)
Muscular Dystrophy Association(30+hours)
American Red Cross(30+hours)
Volunteer club
College Library(30+hours)
Habitat for Humanity(30+hours)</p>

<p>I made it a point to get 30+ volunteer hours or more.</p>

<p>Awards: Scholarships, 3 hospital volunteer awards, first aid certificate, and CPR certificate.</p>

<p>Thank you for all the help in advance:)</p>

<p>are you applying as a sophmore or junior?
as a sophmore your chances are a bit on the low side. as a junior, your chances are pretty good (for certain schools on the list). it also depends on what your major is.</p>

<p>I will be a sophmore and want to go to these schools for my junior year?
Also i have good essays and good recommendations.</p>

<p>I would like to major in premedicine/history</p>

<p>What kind of history? You can increase your chances if you're a history major in a nonimpacted one like Asian-American studies or African American studies.</p>

<p>is having a CPR cert. really something that looks good to schools? I have one and it never even crossed my mind</p>

<p>Nah, I highly doubt cpr and emergency first aid are important. Both certificates can be had in a week. I think EMT-B certification and above would look good tho.</p>

<p>not to be hostile, but it looks like you just chose a smorgasbord of vaguely related organizations with which to volunteer.</p>

<p>Darkstar, your post reminded me of this "The Onion" article ^_^ :</p>

<p>Soup-Kitchen Volunteers Hate College-Application-Padding Brat</p>

<p>April 2, 2003 | Issue 39•12</p>

<p>SEATTLE—Volunteers at the Pike Street Salvation Army have grown to hate college-application padder Justin Malveaux, 17, sources reported Monday.</p>

<p>Malveaux, who is passionately dedicated to getting into Stanford.</p>

<p>"It's not that Justin doesn't work hard, because he does," said Karla Perkins, 44, weeknight coordinator at the downtown Seattle soup kitchen. "He does whatever you ask of him, and he's pleasant and polite, always complimenting everyone. Still, I can't stand the little Stanford-application-padding ****er."</p>

<p>Perkins met Malveaux in February, when the Bellingham West High School junior submitted a résumé and cover letter requesting a volunteer position.</p>

<p>"Justin said he wanted to help those less fortunate than him, and also to get his volunteering out of the way so he can concentrate on AP classes next year," Perkins said. "Stanford is his first choice, and UCLA is his 'safety.' He also plans to apply to Washington State 'just for laughs,' whatever that means."</p>

<p>An honors student and active participant in five extracurricular groups, Malveaux said he is committed to making himself an indispensable member of the soup kitchen's Tuesday-evening crew for the four months he plans to be there.</p>

<p>"This experience will be invaluable when I have to write my personal essay, which counts for a lot with Stanford," Malveaux said. "It's the kind of real-world growth experience that goes over huge with the admissions people. And, if I ever need a recommendation, there are several people here who I think I've bonded with enough to ask."</p>

<p>The staff's disdain for the upper-middle-class Malveaux went largely unspoken during his first month and a half at the center, manifesting itself primarily in the occasional eye roll. On March 18, however, a floodgate of vitriol was opened when Malveaux asked staff coordinator Jamal Washburn to leave the employee break room, mistaking him for a homeless man.</p>

<p>"I hate that little rich-kid bastard," Washburn said. "He'll be out the door the second he can say he volunteered here for four months. Or, as he'll put it, 'February 2003 to May 2003.'"</p>

<p>Despite their hatred of him, staffers admitted that Malveaux has been helpful. According to Perkins, he has used his "fresh perspective" to increase efficiency, placing a clipboard at the end of the kitchen table and inviting shelter patrons to sign up for the next evening's meal so that the kitchen might better predict attendance.</p>

<p>To combat staff tardiness, Malveaux suggested that volunteers be permitted three missed shifts before being barred from working at the center.</p>

<p>"As much as I hate to admit it, he has made some improvements," Perkins said. "But he does it in this smug way, like we're so lucky to be graced with the presence of this brilliant, college-bound prodigy, even if only for a few precious months."</p>

<p>"That sunny, can-do attitude is really starting to grate on me," employee Randy Louis said. "Just pass out the tater tots, prepster."</p>

<p>The staff generally uses the 20 minutes Malveaux spends sweeping the parking lot each Tuesday as an opportunity to exchange stories of his naivete.</p>

<p>"A homeless woman came in wearing a Diabetes Awareness Fun Run T-shirt she got from a box at the shelter," Perkins said. "Justin was saying how inspiring it was that this woman could still care about others, even with all her troubles."</p>

<p>Perkins said she finds Malveaux's attempts to connect with her condescending.</p>

<p>"He's finally stopped asking me where I see myself in five years," Perkins said. "I honestly think he thought he was challenging me to ask myself questions I wouldn't ordinarily ask. Like people in my social strata aren't capable of introspection without the help of somebody better-educated."</p>

<p>"Now, he just talks about himself," Perkins continued. "He wants to be a writer, but he might be an international human-rights lawyer. He gave me his solemn word that, whatever he decides, he will use his skills for the betterment of the world. Thank God, now I can sleep at night."</p>

<p>At the end of each shift, Malveaux records his "hours worked" in his PDA and makes a point of getting Perkins to sign off on it—a ritual Perkins has grown to detest.</p>

<p>"He can talk all he wants about how enriching this experience has been, but it's completely obvious that all he's thinking about is how good this is going to look on his transcript," Perkins said. "Here at the Salvation Army, we try to appreciate all the help God sends our way, but I draw the line with that little ****."</p>

<p>pennsylvania university? please don't call it that. it is the university of pennsylvania, upenn, or penn. thanks :]</p>

<p>so you guys are saying that all that volunteer work that "wanttogotoivy" did was really not necassary?</p>

<p>But what college do you guys think he can get into? can he get into upenn, brown,cornell,vanderbilt,notre dame,NYU, or emory university.</p>

<p>Brown university - tremendous reach
Cornell University - tremendous reach
Emory University - reach
NYU - reach
Pennyslvania University - Upenn? tremendous reach if so.
North Carolina University - high match
Vanderbilt University - low reach
Notre Dame University - low reach</p>

<p>hes a URM with a 3.5 gpa...he has legit chances at all those schools</p>

<p>3.7 is competitive for non-URMs at all those schools so 3.5 will be competitive for him.</p>

<p>URM doesn't make as big of an impression as freshmen class - a college wont "round out" a graduating class by adding more URM transfers. </p>

<p>Also, his college isn't exactly competitive. There will be hundreds of applicants with 3.5's from many other tier-I schools competing for positions in the transfer class.</p>

<p>Combined with the 24 act and 2.5 HS GPA, i still say most (and especially the ivies) are very high reaches.</p>

<p>Does a URM 3.5 gpa really compare to a 3.7 GPA? I don't think that's accurate. A .2 difference seems too big.</p>

<p>uhhhh *** r u smoking URM's r worth way more than .2 this guys in 4 sure and its well deserved for all you honkeys out there</p>

<p>well, ok then ... go look up the transfer statistics for all of the colleges he listed. At most, a few of the colleges will accept about 35% of those who apply. You can also be sure that he wont be the only URM and that the vast majority of those who are applying will be from much more renown colleges and will also have gpa's of at least 3.5</p>

<p>and like I said, URM matters significantly more for freshmen than it does for transfers.</p>

<p>URM for transfer means DICK.</p>

<p>Try UChicago - tremendous reach still, but I've heard 60% of the decision at least is essay. :)</p>