Chances?

<p>I go to an extremely competitive high school (ranked 6th in the country after all the legacy ones) in the United States, and am currently aiming for Harvard or an Ivy League. My school doesn’t rank or calculate GPAs in order to reduce already overwhelming competition, but I have had all As except for the occasional A- and one B in one semester of math (a B at this school is considered a A at other schools because it is so difficult to get all As at this school, and furthermore it was the highest math course offered for my grade). I have decent ECs:

  • high school newspaper editor junior and senior year
  • varsity tennis 3 years out of four
  • leader of math club and only girl in the entire club
  • peer tutor and elementary school tutor
  • State recognized writer and I have written one published YA novel
  • Member of the debate team, and I go to competitions most weekends and I have won numerous awards.</p>

<p>Granted, I don’t have many, because the major thing I am focusing on is my neuroscience work which I am extremely passionate about:
– Worked since sophomore year with an esteemed neuroscience professor at UC Berkeley.
– Developed a computer program in accordance with Scientific Learning company based on my neuroscientific work that helps children with reading disabilities. Already has been implemented in numerous schools in my school district. My work has been commended with local newspapers and NPR has shown interest.</p>

<p>There you have it. Also, I want to mention that all this is work that I do because I am passionate about it and sincerely interested; it’s not simply to impress colleges.</p>

<p>Also, sorry for the terrible grammar; I’m not exactly wide awake right now</p>

<p>Oh, and also, 2340 SAT</p>

<p>It’s virtually impossible to predict with certainty anyone’s chances as so much of the applications process is subjective and comes down to how an admissions director “feels” after reading your teacher recommendations and essays and compares them to all other applicants. Every college is also looking for something different – and what they are looking for changes from year to year – so, your chances actually vary from year to year. You need to just send your applications out into the universe and hope for the best.
Good luck to you.</p>

<p>See: [Guidance</a> Office: Answers From Harvard’s Dean, Part 1 - NYTimes.com](<a href=“http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/10/harvarddean-part1/]Guidance”>Guidance Office: Answers From Harvard's Dean, Part 1 - The New York Times)</p>

<p>"Many people believe “best” ought to be defined by standardized tests, grades, and class rank, and it is easy to understand why. Such a system, another Harvard dean of admissions, Bill Bender, wrote in 1960, “has great appeal because it has the merits of apparent simplicity, objectivity, relative administrative cheapness in time and money and worry, a clear logical basis and therefore easy applicability and defensibility.”</p>

<p>While we value objective criteria, we apply a more expansive view of excellence. Test scores and grades offer some indication of students’ academic promise and achievement. But we also scrutinize applications for extracurricular distinction and personal qualities.</p>

<p>Students’ intellectual imagination, strength of character, and their ability to exercise good judgment — these are critical factors in the admissions process, and they are revealed not by test scores but by students’ activities outside the classroom, the testimony of teachers and guidance counselors, and by alumni/ae and staff interview reports."</p>

<p>“Personal qualities and character provide the foundation upon which each admission rests. Harvard alumni/ae often report that the education they received from fellow classmates was a critically important component of their college experience. The education that takes place between roommates, in dining halls, classrooms, research groups, extracurricular activities, and in Harvard’s residential houses depends on selecting students who will reach out to others.”</p>

<p>[Guidance</a> Office: Answers From Harvard’s Dean, Part 3 - NYTimes.com](<a href=“http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/14/harvarddean-part3/]Guidance”>Guidance Office: Answers From Harvard's Dean, Part 3 - The New York Times)</p>

<p>"Recommendations from secondary school teachers and counselors are extremely important at Harvard and at many other colleges, particularly those with selective admissions processes. Faced with more academically qualified applicants than places in the freshman class, our admission officers review the two required teacher recommendations and the counselor report with great care, often commenting on them in writing on “reader sheets” in each application.</p>

<p>We often project the recommendations themselves onto large screens so that all members of the Admissions Committee can see them during the subcommittee and full committee review processes in February and March.</p>

<p>Recommendations can help us to see well beyond test scores and grades and other credentials and can illuminate such personal qualities as character and leadership as well as intellectual curiosity, creativity, and love of learning. Along with essays, interviews, and other materials in the application, recommendations can offer evidence of an applicant’s potential to make a significant difference to a college community and beyond."</p>

<p>hey Faerylights,</p>

<p>Woah, I think u have incredible chances!! Are u applying RD or EA? (out of curiosity, where did u apply EA/ED?)</p>