I think this might best be decided in consultation with the counselor at the private high school and, potentially, admissions officers at the specific schools.
However, for schools that I did not classify as low or very low probability, I think OP should submit scores. A 1220 is above the 74th percentile nationally and, depending on what traditionally underrepresented group OP is a member of, a 1220 is likely at an even higher percentile for the subgroup (source: https://satsuite.collegeboard.org/media/pdf/sat-percentile-ranks-gender-race-ethnicity.pdf). The 1220, combined with 4s on the APs taken so far, helps to show that the unweighted GPA is probably closer to what GPAs looked like before there was so much grade inflation around the country.
So for schools where the test score places OP in the middle 50%, or even just below the bottom 25%, I would likely submit the test score, especially if the majority of accepted students don’t submit a test. But oftentimes admissions offices will provide guidance as to whether someone should go test optional or not, and that is certainly better than a general rule of thumb.
And as a SC resident, I think OP’s odds are better at the SC publics than they would be if OP was from out-of-state.
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OP stats appear to be in the middle of the frosh class profile of USCarolina, according to Freshman Applicants - | University of South Carolina and assuming that both the weighted GPA of 4.463 and the 4.1-4.7 range listed are the SC standardized weighted GPA calculations (link in post #13).
Clemson reports a higher SAT range and does not report GPA range: Admissions Statistics | Clemson University, South Carolina
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Your guidance counselor should be able to give you good advice at any good private school. I am wondering how a 3.65 unweighted GPA at a private college prep high school might compare with a 3.65 unweighted GPA at a typical competitive suburban public high school.
This does seem low for the bottom 2/3 of your list.
You have already said that you will be trimming your list of reach schools quite a bit. This strikes me as being a good idea. If it were me I think that I would cut at least 10 and perhaps 15 schools out of the last 20 on the list, while focusing on looking for a good fit. Also, in sending in applications given how long your list is application fatigue seems like a possibility. You might want to first get applications in for your safeties and for a small handful of whatever schools you think are the best fit for you, and then see how much energy you have to complete the remaining applications.
You have schools on your list that are already quite close to costing $100,000 per year, and will probably pass $100,000 by the time that you get there. Hopefully this is okay for you and your parents.
Six safeties are plenty, assuming that you are happy with your safeties and that at least a couple of them really are safeties.
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