2200 SAT, 4.14 GPA, band manager, band section leader/senior leadership, VA Regional governor's school (scholarship) for theatre, VA Residential Governor's School (scholarship) for humanities, 10 years of piano, 2.5 years teaching experience piano, photographer at a studio, 5s on all APs taken, Dartmouth Book award (junior year HS), writing/history tutor, class help, Latin Club, History Club, English Club
basically, not having any social life to speak of is a good standard to measure yourself by.
In retrospect, I really don't think it was all worth it. Go to a school that you like; not necessarily the "brand name" education. Employers don't really care about your undergrad degree at all. So excel at a school that you'd be comfortable at and can afford, and look for a really prestigious institution for grad school, because ultimately, that's what's going to be the most important part of your future resumee.
Also, don't be a moron like me and take 6 AP courses your senior year of high school. you will regret it. that's all I shall say on the topic.
2007-02-18 07:10:28
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answer #1
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answered by Evangeline 2
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understanding numerous languages, even in part, is a plus. in case you are able to not communicate fluent english, then you quite want the TOEFL for admissions. once you're searching at Ivy Leagues you want to take the SAT II to boot to the ACT or SAT. colleges inspect your unweighted GPA out of four.0, and at the same time as Ivy Leagues gained't furnish you with credit from AP training, you want to do properly, truly in AP English, to face a probability. Honors training advise no longer some thing. Sorry. ultimately, you are able to truly get a scholarship, maximum in all probability finished to Purdue.
2016-12-04 08:22:37
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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My son is at one of the top liberal arts schools in the country...some of his qualifications:
4.40ish GPA, National AP Scholar, Presidential Scholars finalist, Captain of golf and soccer teams, President of Senior class, 2300+ SAT scores, fabulous letters of recommendation, 4 year member of about 4-5 clubs, Teacher's Assistant, at least two independent studies (often took more than the required 5 courses), etc.
Even so, I waited with fingers crossed before he was accepted. Regardless of how qualified you are, there are many others in (relatively) the same boat and you can't be certain 'till it happens. Hopefully you will have a few schools you'd be happy to attend.
2007-02-18 14:07:49
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answer #3
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answered by Shars 5
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I got into Penn.
My GPA was probably a bit under 4.0, my combined SATS were 1420, I never took the ACT, can't for the life of me remember my PSAT scores.
I was involved in a sport, some community service, and the school chorus for 4 years (colleges don't necessarily like to see a zillion activities, they like to see you do a few that you're committed to and are willing to spend time on)
And of course a kick-*** app essay. *grin*
2007-02-18 07:04:20
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answer #4
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answered by crzywriter 5
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