<p>An interesting resource is ■■■■■■■■■■■■■. Applicants provide their stats and the schools they’re interested in and the (free) site does some math and gives you a number, along with cautions about low sample size, not statistically selected, etc. But at [Stanford</a> University Applicant Details and Admission Predictions | My Chances.net - Data-driven college admission prediction.](<a href=“http://college.■■■■■■■■■■■■■/college-3-Stanford-University.html;page=applicants]Stanford”>http://college.■■■■■■■■■■■■■/college-3-Stanford-University.html;page=applicants) you see a table of numbers for those applying, rejected, accepted, etc. You’ll note that Stanford is one of those places where the numbers are a relatively small part of the equation. Lots of 4.0/2400’s end up in the reject list because they weren’t exactly what the school was looking for: presumably qualified but “interesting” people.</p>