Hi, so I am an IB student. I got a gpa of 3.2 my freshman year and 3.64 my sophomore year. This year, I got a 3.79 (IB year) about 4.15ish weighted. So, my average unweighted gpa is about 3.55ish.
I did study for the SAT to get 2150
CR-660
Math-790
Writing-700
I know my gpa sucks but if I look at my SAT I do get a bit more hope because the math and writing seems acceptable for a few good business schools.
I do not have any hooks and a few extracurricular like co-captain of the tennis team that won both conference and tournament, student council, leader of another youth club.
Please chance me for some good business schools like Berkeley, Cornell, Carnegie, Michigan, UVA, U Texas-Austin, NYU.
(almost forgot. I heard that UC schools don’t look at freshman gpa how true is this?)
THANKS!!!
What state do you live in?
I would say that Cornell and CMU are going to be fairly large reaches, unless you have a substanial hook. Second, are you willing to pay the entire freight on OOS at the state schools you listed?
UC’s do not include Freshman grades in their GPA calculation, but they need to be reported on the UC application and will be seen on your HS transcripts. Here is the UC GPA calculator: http://rogerhub.com/gpa-calculator-uc/
Please note that as if you are OOS, you can only use 8 semesters (4 year long) IB/AP classes for the extra honors points in the calculation. If you are in-state, certain UC approved Honors classes can be used.
If you are OOS, be prepared to pay $55K/year with little or financial aid for OOS applicants.
UCB will be a Low Reach
Cornell/CMU/UT Austin: high reaches
NYU: low reach
UVA/UMich: HIGH REACH if you are OOS, low reach if IS
UCB: low reach
What exactly is the “Unique” part about your post?
I am an international student
There are literally thousands of those. 
No, probably tens of thousands.
Also, your questions have been asked before a lot
94% of the world’s population lives outside the US. I’m afraid you are hardly “unique” on that account. But you may be in other ways, so concentrate on those.
Wouldn’t the “international” part be the most non-unique thing, considering they have very limited seats for internationals. For example, MIT has an acceptance rate of 7% but only admits 3% of internationals. I assume the same percentage drop spans each school because colleges give priority to domestic (sometimes in-state) applicants.