<p>Member name: Farro
Gender: M
State or Country: NY
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 740:790:720
SAT II scores: 800:790:770:750:750:730
AP scores: 2 4's and 2 5's
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>@ the SAT IIs.....Why?</p>
<p>Saturdays get wasted so often these days :p</p>
<p>Member name: kfowler
Gender: M
State or Country: IL
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 34
SAT II scores: 800 USH, 780 Math II, 730 Bio-m
AP scores: 5 USH (only one offered before senior year)
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>Member name: Elvito
Gender: M
State or Country: New Zealand
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: M: 800 CR: 780 W: 720
SAT II scores: 800 Math II, 800 Chemistry, 800 Chinese
IB Scores: seven 7s
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>Member name: sherlock1016
Gender: Male
State or Country: NY
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 35
SAT II scores: didn't send
AP scores: APUSH 5, EngLang 5, HumanGeo 5, Euro 4
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>Member name: jarsilver
Gender: M
State or Country: MA
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 2330: 800/730/800
SAT II scores: 770 USH, 760 French
AP scores: APUSH 5, AP Lang 5, AP French Lang 4
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>Member name: hipster23
Gender: M
State or Country: FL
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 770/800/780
SAT II scores: 800 Bio M, 770 M2, 730 Lit
AP scores: APUSH 4, APWRLD 4, AP ENG 5, AP BIO 5, AP CALC BC 5
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>I posted back in the day when we didn't need SAT II's. Well, here they are: Math II 800, Chemistry 750, World History 750</p>
<p>Yale only requires 2 Subject Tests, right? So if we have 2 great ones, but 1 ****-poor one, they'll just look at the top 2, correct?</p>
<p>correct hookem.</p>
<p>One minor point: Yale accepts the ACT w/ writing in lieu of the SAT + 2 subject tests.</p>
<p>More to the point: if you get a good ACT score, you don't have to send subject scores.</p>
<p>Yes, us Westerners tend to forget about the ACT, though it is becoming more popular out here.</p>
<p>Member name: soserene
Gender: female
State or Country: CA
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 720:800:710 (2230)
SAT II scores: US History: 750 Math I: 730 Spanish: 670
AP scores:US History: 5 Stats:5 (taking 5 more this year)
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>29 pledgers so far, keep them coming!</p>
<p>member name: SuperMarioJ
Male
State: NJ
M730 CR650 W670 (retaking in Jan)
3.97 UW GPA
SAT II : 710 on both MLEVEL I AND II
AP : Bio:5
No ap courses offered in school.
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>Member name: Savs
Gender: Female
State or Country: MN
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 2230 (720,800,710), 34
SAT II scores: 2230 (730Lit, 740BioE, 760USH)
AP scores: English Language (5), APUSH (5), (3 more this year)
Deferred EA (Y/N): N</p>
<p>Member name: Dbate
Gender: Male
State or Country: TX
SAT (M:CR:W) or ACT: 34 (36 R, 35 M, 32 E, 31 S)
SAT II scores: Doesn't matter for Yale (Gosh I love Yale's policy)
AP scores: English Language (5), APUSH (5), Chem (No Test), Comp. Sci (No Test), Senior Year: Bio, Physics B, Calc AB, Eng. Lit, Stats, Economics, Government
Deferred EA (Y/N): Only applied RD</p>
<p>Wow it is exciting to finally be able to post our own after looking through the threads for everyone else's results.</p>
<p>I know, right Dbate?
I'm finally a Yale applicant!
Anyone else looking forward to a wholeheartedly "regretful" rejection letter from Yale?</p>
<p>It is so bad, last night I had a dream that I got rejected bc I had 6 Bs on my transcript, which I know is pretty bad but it still places me at 13/476, that is because few people get As at my school.</p>
<p>I am much more hoping that I get accepted, but I can not honestly wrap my head around actually being accepted. But every time I think about being rejected I comfort myself with the knowledge that I already got into the University of Texas.</p>
<p>Member name: shayonsaleh
Gender: Male
State or Country: North Carolina
SAT (M:CR:W): 2170 (800:730:640)
ACT: 35 (35E : 35M : 32R : 36S)
SAT II scores: 800 Bio E, 800 Math 2, 780 US Hist., 650 Spanish Reading
AP scores: US History (5), Calc BC (5), Environmental (5), US Gov (5), Eng. Lang. (5), Eng. Lit., Psychology, Euro. History, Biology, Comp. Gov., Statistics, Microecon., Macroecon., Comp. Sci AB
Deferred EA (Y/N):</p>