If it possible for a person with a 1760 to get into Princeton if...

<p>they apply through questbride?
hispanic female…1760 SAT… okay gpa (3.5-3.6)
from urban neighborhood. not much life struggles.
okay EC’s.</p>

<h1>cough# 10char</h1>

<p>A 1760 is very low, even for a URM. Assuming this is for you, have you considered taking the ACT?</p>

<p>this is not me btw.
you can read my other posts and see that i am actually AA with about a 200point higher SAT.
i was asking this for a friend</p>

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<p>Yeah it definitely wouldn’t be enough for a non-URM</p>

<p>The more urgent question is: Can a person who averages about a 580-590 on all three sections of an aptitude test that’s meant to gauge one’s performance in college really do well at arguably the most academically challenging university in the U.S?</p>

<p>That’s a good point too</p>

<p>No, adcoms want to see that the URM can succeed and graduate from Princeton. There are plenty of Hispanics with 2000+ and higher GPAs than the OP.</p>

<p>Given the frequency with which clerical errors are made in this country, it is certainly possible for this person to gain admission to Princeton. This person should probably apply to other schools too.</p>

<p>No, a “clerical” error is actually the closest thing to impossible because more than one officer reviews an application. It’s not like they sit at their desks clicking “Yes”, “No”, “Waitlist”, “No”, “No”, “ooo published writer; Yes”, “No”, “No”.</p>

<p>“There are plenty of Hispanics with 2000+ and higher GPAs than the OP.”</p>

<p>From the same socioeconomic background too.</p>

<p>this profile does not represent me btw.
you can look through my posts and see i am an AA with a higher SAT.
i was asking this for a friend</p>