<p>Your SAT would be good enough for you to get admission to many colleges except the Ivy tier but do not make you a strong candidate for scholarships. To get scholarships, you’d better raise your SAT scores or aim at the colleges that are less competitive for international students. </p>
<p>SAT II tests are only required by the most selective colleges. Some students may use them to make up for their subpar GPAs. It is not clear how much weight they have in the decision of scholarships. Most scholarships are awarded on the basis of academic excellence, service, leadership, and special ability. If I were you I would choose to take SAT I one more time. It may help to make you more competitive. There are quite a few students from China and India with high SAT scores. They are applying to the Ivies as well as the second and third tier colleges as their safeties. You may be competing with them.</p>
<p>U of Michigan is very expensive for out-of-state and international students. It seems that it does not offer money to international undergraduates. Tufts can be a reach for you.</p>
<p>With your current stats, I would suggest you to consider the following colleges where you have better chances to get discounts of the cost through scholarships: Grinnell College (IA), Knox College (IL), Illinois Wesleyan University, Earlham College (IN), DePauw University (IN), Albion College (MI), Calvin College (MI), Hope College (MI), Macalester College (MN), St. Olaf College (MN), Colgate University (NY), Hamilton College (NY), Skidmore College (NY), Kenyon College (OH), Denison College (OH), The College of Wooster (OH), Lawrence University (WI). Some may be more competitive than the others (like Colgate, Grinnell, Kenyon, and Hamilton).</p>
<p>Contact the colleges for information and show your interest in them. Look at the common data set of the college you are interested in to have a better understanding of their admission criteria and financial aspect. (For example, <a href=“http://www.grinnell.edu/offices/institutionalresearch/CDS[/url]”>http://www.grinnell.edu/offices/institutionalresearch/CDS</a>)</p>