<p>I just picked out some schools with 1) good math department and 2) good student-faculty interaction
Harvey Mudd College
MIT
Pomona College
Rice University
Swarthmore College
University of Chicago
Emory University
Haverford College
Boston College
Occidental College
University of Washington (my home state)</p>
<p>Current Grade: Junior, Class of 2011</p>
<p>Unweighted GPA: 3.968
Weighted GPA: my school does not weight</p>
<p>AP/IB classes taken (or will be taking):
IB English HL, IB History HL, AP Calculus BC, AP Physics B (Honors Physics + AP test), Honors Biology, Honors Chemistry</p>
<p>Class rank: my school doesn’t rank; probably ~5% out of 450</p>
<p>SAT Reasoning:
December CR 720 Math 770 W 620 -> 2110
June CR 710 Math 800 W 630 -> 2140
Super Score 2150</p>
<p>SAT Subject:
Math Level 2: 800
Physics: 800</p>
<p>ECs
Math Club: 4 years, vice president in senior year
Staff writer of school opinion magazine: 2 years (covering politics, religion, education etc)
Math Tutoring: 2 years, twice a week
Band: three years (from sophomore to senior year)
National Honor Society: 2 years
Volunteer at local hospital: 200+ hours</p>
<p>Summer Activity
2009 Ross Mathematics Program at Ohio State University: an intensive eight-week residental math program (indeed very intensive)</p>
<p>Honors/Awards
AMC School Winner (9th, 10th, 11th grade)
AMC 12: 90, AIME: 4</p>
<p>Additional Note: I came over from South Korea to U.S. 3 years ago. Because I had much difficulty in understanding (much less speaking) English, I had to take regular classes in 9th grade. Of course, I got used to using English over time & moved up to Honors/IB classes.</p>
<ol>
<li>Please critique my selection of colleges</li>
<li>tell me whether I should retake SAT Reasoning test</li>
</ol>
<p>Even though your SAT scores aren’t amazing, your personal history and course strength should get you in to almost any school. Colleges are trying to fill niches. There are plenty of students that get 2150s on the sat (I’m one of them) and 3.9 GPA’s, but not many of them transfered from South Korea. They want excellent students that are diverse and unique. I think you should definitely be able to get in to some of the schools on your list; you are definitely qualified. Sometimes its just left to chance. Hope that there isn’t another South Korean applying to the same school who just happens to have a 4.0 and a 2300 SAT.</p>
<p>@silverjacket I guess there would be a few South Koreans that have 4.0 and a 2300 (particularly from prestigious schools such as Minjok). Having 2150 seems to be a bit of drawback.
To make up for that, I’m doing an ED at Swarthmore and an EA at MIT.</p>
<p>Also note that I recently became U.S. Permanent Resident. So I’m not technically an “international”</p>
<p>NICE NICE NICE, now you don’t have to suffer through that crappy international applicant crap, one of my friends really got screwed over that issue, even though he lived in the U.S for over 6 years.</p>
<p>You can’t ED at swarth and EA at MIT i believe… correct me if I’m wrong.</p>
<p>I hope you can write well, because the LACs can often be won over by a stellar essay.</p>
<p>Okay, while your 2180 is a bit of a drawback, you are good at math; you will succeed at math. You are “pointy” and have a focus, which is rarely a drawback. You aren’t competing against South Koreans so much as other math students. Your math credentials? Stellar. I would say that you are most likely in at Harvey Mudd. MIT…mmm, you have a better chance than most but you are not “in”. However, I would say that you are “in” at Boston College.</p>
<p>i don’t think people realize how prestigious the Ross summer program is, if you can raise your SAT to a 2250+, your close to getting into to most, if not all of your schools as long as you don’t screw up your essays and interviews.</p>