Don’t know, your stats are obviously in range to be admitted (doesn’t mean you will be). Qualified or not, chances for scholars are low. They would be low for folks with higher stats than you. Many of the Scholar interveiwees have a strong spike in some artistic or academic area (in your case, it would be scientific research, a serious STEM competition participation, and maybe even a winner or strong placement). If actually low income, then you would simply qualify for Emory Advantage. If they truly liked your application (so you would need super strong essays), they may throw you a Liberal Arts Scholarship.
For those who get any of the Woodruff Scholarships/interviews, you would ideally would want the better (as more than these featured folks were interviewed and received the Scholarship, but these are among those who actually took the offer) among these profiles:
Class of 2021: http://news.emory.edu/stories/2016/08/er_bts_college_emory_scholars/campus.html
Class of 2022: http://news.emory.edu/stories/2017/08/er_bts_emory_scholars/campus.html
- You should assume that most of these matriculates are as strong or stronger statistically compared to you. Having a spike could help one stand out among the tons of people with good stats who will be regular admits as well as enhance pne's competitiveness for any of the talent specific scholarships indicated on the Scholars website:http://college.emory.edu/scholars/scholarships/other-scholarships/index.html
*Note that the Woodruff even has a sub-category containing a Woodruff Research Scholarship, so those with research experience or accomplishments and other good credentials could end up targered for that one.
You probably should not be applying to Emory anyway because you are trying to major in BME, which Emory does not offer. Exactly what would you major in if you ended up at Emory. Also, are there any actual safeties you are applying to (no, Emory RD definitely does not count, even among those schools is not an actual safety or even a definite statistical match in an RD round)? Because most of those, except Emory, the one that should not be as relevant for you, make you apply to the engineering school or heavily consider major (Tech), and engineering schools at elite privates that offer them are SUPER selective. You may luck up (like basically…anyone who is admitted. Do people who were admitted deserve it yes, but they were also lucky just as many denied applicants were unlucky), but one issue you have is that the STEM APs look like a struggle (like having physics on the transcript but not reporting that score and instead reporting chem and biology where you scored 4). Did you make 5 on Calc. AB. That or a dual enrollment calculus course plus a couple of 5s in AP STEMs would have greatly enhanced your competitiveness (you have the ACT and GPA, though ACT may be a little low for most engineering schools at elite privates and publics. However, engineering schools have very tough first year courses in math and physics for those majors, so many put a premium on subject specific preparation once your general standardized test scores and GPA hit an okay mark. Note that they would actually pay special attention to ACT math, SAT 2 math, and AP/IB/Dual enrollment calc. performance, or STEM ECs and achievements. Even Emory may give a bump for regular STEM majors or pre-meds with the latter).