It’s obvious that you have worked hard at building a college worthy resume. You should be proud of your efforts.
Sometimes, I believe, that students get their signals crossed about how universities admit students.
Based on my personal experience, I think you should meet with your counselor and ask about where your alumni have been accepted and eventually matriculated. It’s important for you to understand this information.
You need to know your budget for college. There are rare free rides because the schools just don’t have the money anymore. They save their dollars to attract top students.
The colleges firstly look at GPA, rigor of coursework, rank and test scores. If the schools accept letters of recommendation (LORs), they expect to hear from teachers who have taught core subjects. They also expect that these efforts result in a high school diploma.
Extracurricular activities may, or may not be considered: “with a 3.6 UW but strong ECs going into premed!”
Unfortunately, your ECs wont make up for rank, nor test scores. A number of universities have returned to require test scores. Why?
The universities want you to be successful. GRADES and test results matter.
The transition to college life is stressful. In “premed”, it’s uber competitive because admissions to medical schools are extremely limited. A number of the colleges you’ve listed are on quarter systems. You have to prove yourself over 10 weeks time. The courses are at a rapid pace. You have to be able to manage dorm/apartment living, finances, daily studying and rest. You are on your own.
Our middle daughter attended medical school and grades/test scores/rank were her top concerns in high school. She was ranked top 10 percent at her 3000+ campus, was an athlete, worked part time jobs, and volunteered. Her SAT was strong. That’s all she had time to do. She got into several UCs and was a recruited athlete.
Our eldest was top 5% (~3900 students) extremely strong SAT, athlete, tutor, part time job and was admitted to almost every school where she applied, including the UCs, Yale, USC, Hopkins, but chose SUNY Buffalo because of their med school alliance.
Our youngest was the #4 student and vying for valedictorian (but didn’t care about that). Missed one question on the SAT. Eagle Scout, part time job, athlete, tutor, and volunteer. Got into the top UCs (UCLA actually gave him full funding), USC, and attended Caltech (they only take ~200 students from around the globe).
This was from more than 10 years ago. The competition has only increased. This is what you face and is why the other posters are telling you that you have a lot of reaches.
I also suggest that you add some Cal States and the local university near your home.