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I know it is a nice school but was wondering what would be a good GPA, SAT scores, and extra curriculars to have to have a good shot.

And what is out of state tuition I know it is where you go to college outside of your state but how long do you have to be there before it is considered your home od you have to be born there?

And how much more is it?

2007-06-23 12:17:49 · 7 answers · asked by fred 3 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

7 answers

Berkeley is one of the most challenging schools to get accepted to, primarily because the caliber is as good or better than any other school, including Stanford or Harvard, but it is far cheaper than than those schools. Therefore, far more people apply to the UC system than many other schools. You will never be a lock, but for an excellent shot you need to have the same as Harvard or Stanford - Excellent GPA, several AP classes, all the required core classes and several elective core classes, excellent test scores, and extra curricular activities that show you have the motivation to succeed and leadership potential.

You generally have to live in a state 1-2 years to be considered a resident.

2007-06-23 12:27:36 · answer #1 · answered by ZenPenguin 7 · 2 2

First -- there is no Berkeley University. There is The University of California, which is often referred to as Berkeley.

The following web site will answer most of your questions about GPA, SAT, etc for UC-Berkeley as well as most other universities.

As for the SATs, more than 75% of the admitted students have 1840 or higher (out of 2400). 98% of those admitted are in the top 10% of their high school classes.

In State Tuition is $7,800
Out of State Tuition is $26,484

I got my PhD there -- so know for sure that you can become a state resident if you are there for one year. You have to prove that you stayed in the state during holidays and vacations (I actually had to produce a credit card receipt from the Thanksgiving holiday). If you are an undergraduate, there may be rules about proving that you are independent or that your parents are residents.

2007-06-23 12:30:03 · answer #2 · answered by Ranto 7 · 2 0

Stanford is probable out of the question. fairly some the best deepest colleges take very few flow scholars -- and maximum of them are scholars moving from good liberal arts colleges so as to be taught something not taught of their unique college. The UC colleges reserve a undeniable nuymber of slots for community college transfers. I have been given my PhD at Berkeley & taught some undergraduate classes. quite a few of my scholars had accomplished their first 2 years at community colleges. i've got secure a hyperlink on their internet internet site that could want that might actually assist you. you should additionally communicate with the counselors at your present day college. i'm specific that they've fairly some journey helping scholars get into 4 year colleges.

2016-12-08 17:30:00 · answer #3 · answered by janzen 4 · 0 0

The University of California, Berkeley (also known as Cal Berkeley) is one of the hardest universities to get into. To be admitted as a freshman you need to be in the top 1% of applicants, however sometimes persons who do not fit this profile are admitted due to affirmative action programs (I'm not saying it in a bad way, but its a fact).

I can tell you from personal experience Berkeley (and all the UC's) take CA residency seriously. I had gone to the University of Hawaii, Manoa for a year and then came back to UCSD, and I had to show them about eight different forms of proof I had remained a California resident while I was in Hawaii (US Postal Records, travel receipts, voting records, affidavit from the University of Hawaii Admissions Office, copy of my CA drivers license, and at least four months of housing payment receipts ... for starters).

If you want to earn California residency before you apply you will have to change a lot of things ... all for at least 12 months. You will need to file your permanent in CA, if you have a car register and insure it in CA, have phone bills from a CA address, register to vote in CA, etc ... It sounds really excessive, but trust me ... if you screw up on any of these things they will charge you out-of-state tuition (and its more than twice in-state tuition). Berkeley's admissions department is allowed to make its own rules and assessment of who is a California resident, and once they make their decision for tuition purposes you don't have very much recourse. The best advice I can give you is contact Cal Berkeley and ask them what you have to do.

2007-06-23 13:14:42 · answer #4 · answered by blursd2 5 · 0 0

You can take a look at the profiles of admitted students for Fall 2007 (GPA, SAT, ACT, SAT II, and other statistics) at: http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/educators/counselors/resources/materials/ITU.pdf on page 37.

To prepare for Berkeley, you should complete the a-g requirements (http://students.berkeley.edu/files/Admissions/Freshman_07.pdf ), study and do well in your high school courses and standardized tests (SAT and/or ACT, and SAT II), take as many AP courses as you can handle (or take community college courses in the a-g subject areas), participate in educational preparation programs available at your high school (see a list on my blog), and commit to one or two extracurricular activities in which you develop leadership skills (more is not better, quality is better than quantity).

Berkeley will weigh the following components of your application (in the order of importance): 1) your essay (Berkeley publishes a guideline on how to write your personal statement at: http://students.berkeley.edu/files/Admissions/Personal_State_07.pdf ) about your academic achievement, talent or extracurricular activities that highlight your motivation, dedication, and/or initiative to achieve, your potential to contribute to the university, and any special circumstances like hardship; 2) your grades and any grade trends (improvements are better than just maintaining a high GPA); 3) your test scores, including SAT and/or ACT, SAT II; and 4) number of AP courses completed compared to the number of AP courses offered at your high school. Other factors are taken into consideration, but to a lesser extent.

You have to live in California for at least one calendar year, with the intention of making California your permanent home, to be considered a resident. Altho it gets more complicated if you are a minor. You can find more info on residency here: http://registrar.berkeley.edu/Residency/legalinfo.html

2007-06-24 23:11:53 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

You could probably get a better answer by checking the schools website and FAQ's. I'm sure you can email and advisor as well.

2007-06-23 12:37:09 · answer #6 · answered by izza 2 · 0 0

I'm pretty sure its way cheaper for CA residents

kind of hard to get into

my bad sister went there

2007-06-23 12:21:00 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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