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My SAT I score is 2220, SAT II (math level 2, physics, chemistry): 2400. I'm giving SAT I again, hoping for a 2300-odd. I've done loads of extra-curriculars, and I will graduate among the top 10% (hopefully 5%) of my cohort. BUT...
My GPA, if computed, will be strictly average.

What are my chances of admission at an Ivy as an INTERNATIONAL UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT applying for FINANCIAL AID?

2006-12-21 04:54:13 · 3 answers · asked by arunbeena 2 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

GPA is definitely more important than SAT -- one counselor told me that the only applicant they would turn down immediately is someone with average grades and a very high SAT - because that means a smart person who cant be bothered to do his work. Exactly what they don't want.

And, many scholarships at US colleges are reserved for US citizens, that's hardly surprising... so the 6,200,000,000 people outside the US will be competing for the few remaining scholarships. Unless you have something really amazing to show, I don't think that you can have too optimistic feelings about getting a scholarship at a top US school. On the other hand, there are probably lots of 2nd level US schools that might be interested... check out the schools ranked from 10 to 100 on the US News List... that might be your best bet.

2006-12-21 06:44:33 · answer #1 · answered by matt 7 · 0 0

In an idyllic international, an "solutions" communicate board will be an section the position recognize-how seekers might want to take chance-free haven from inane political and ideological banter with the intention to seek honest and (though it isn't conceivable to carry genuine impartiality) at a minimum balanced, non - inflammatory solutions. You, OP, are "quantitatively easing" the "psychological marketplace" cost of those forums with each and every ridiculous placed up that serves as not something more desirable than a self-aggrandizing mastubatory exercising to in my opinion assert and convey mutually praise for your own ideological viewpoint. How do you imagine your hero Professor Keynes would experience about all this QA? what's next, "literal Swiftism": the undesirable interior the U. S. can eat their youthful and serve 2 applications with one action? i'm an noticeably proud product on the undergraduate and graduate aspect of "Public Ivy" classes (e.g. Berkeley, UMich, UIll, UNC--colleges w/right ranked classes), and form and excellence abound. Please use those forums mindfully and circumvent dropping human beings's time.

2016-10-16 21:03:04 · answer #2 · answered by fote 4 · 0 0

Whether you apply for financial aid or not is irrelevant to Ivy League schools. All they care about, sadly, is if you get your tuition paid...doesn't matter how you do it.

The best thing to do is to go to the school's web page and look into their admission requirements for international students. That is the only way you will be able to tell.

2006-12-21 05:02:30 · answer #3 · answered by Brandon W 5 · 0 1

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