<p>AP classes (all A’s, with 4-5 on AP test----some of them I didn’t take the class but I took the test)
US History, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, European History, World History, US government and politics, Comparative Government and Politics, Psychology, Human Geography, Calculus AB, Statistics, Biology, Spanish, English Language and Composition, English Literature</p>
<p>Awards- DECA state-level awards, National Merit, National AP Scholar
and candidate for Presidential Scholar</p>
<p>Extracurriculars- Sophomore-Senior Class Board, DECA, NHS, Track and Field (I know my extracurriculars kind of suck)</p>
<p>Activities outside of school- BBYO, Hebrew School (up to 12th grade graduation), 250+volunteer hours at a foodbank, 20+ volunteer hours tutoring</p>
<p>I know that for Harvard, they generally look at amazing extracurriculars more than perfect scores, but do I have a chance at getting in?</p>
<p>i think he meant 2300 and 24, which he can increase to 2400 and 36. that what i hope he meant. </p>
<p>Unless he meant that the college board board of directors were planning to write a special letter of recommendation and personally draw stars and hearts on the score reports that he send to harvard mit and other ivies.</p>
<p>and how the heck are you gonna give 15 aps and get 4 or 5 in all, without attending classes? by just reading the texts?</p>
<p>pal, you shuda used your brains, and spent less time with the books and more time building you resume man. then you would have been unrejectable. now you just look like a nerd without a life (to the unis that is).</p>
<p>^wait u srsly think that if the op got a 2300 instead of a 2400 that it wuld be grounds of a rejection? I was always given the impression that after like about 2250 colleges did not care much.
Who knows maybe 2-3 questions on one test that contains about 160 questions really have a significant imortance to colleges?</p>