Very dependant on the school you are applying to. Also depends on the program in the college in the university you are applying to.
Most schools will require a standardized college exam (ACT or SAT or both), a writing sample in the form of an essay, possibly references from your teachers, and a transcript from the schools you have previously attended. Then, they compare all this against the admission packets of everyone else who applied.
There are admission councelors who can guide you through the process, and also tell you what was lacking if you find yourself on a waitlist (i.e. - ACT score was low... retake the test in the next month and we'll see if we can find a spot for you). Larger universities with better academic reputations tend to have the longest and strictest admissions process, so keep in mind that this is a worthwhile process.
2007-04-20 00:59:42
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answer #1
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answered by Patti C 6
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The US has hundreds of universities -- ranging from the best in the world to some that are, quite franky. pretty bad. Requirements are not uniform.
Princeton Review's web site has a tool where you can enter information about your background and interests & it will suggest appropriate universities for you. The link is below. The web site also lists statistics about those who are accepted.
2007-04-20 00:54:24
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answer #2
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answered by Ranto 7
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You need to check the relevant websites for the universities you're interested in.
2007-04-20 00:42:53
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answer #3
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answered by Pearl 5
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it particularly isn't a extreme SAT score in any respect. You sound like community college cloth. in case you won't be in a position to deal with extreme college AP training, then you definately heavily isn't waiting to deal with college training.
2016-10-03 07:11:50
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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