NOVA
George Mason Longwood |
Adding to the chorus of these two schools being unlikely. Georgetown likes top, top grades. BC does too, but at least offers an ED option. Schools that report lower GPAs include Tulane and Lehigh. U Rochester. |
example of how an ignorant post can derail a thread |
Elon?
High Point Loyola Maryland University of Mary Washington George Washington American (reaches) |
DS is similar to OP's kid - 3.25/3.75 GPA (UW/W) and 1500 SAT. rigorous schedule. 5 APs so far and another 6 senior year. No real upward trend in GPA over the years.
Any recommendations on schools? |
^^ PP again. FCPS public. |
Is U Rochester a possible admit for a kid like OPs, assuming the GPA is from a public school and weighted? |
No. You cannot compare a private to a public. Most privates do not have a GPA other than for parents to see. A 3.5 with hardest classes is good at a top private. You would not see this reflected in scattergram a because there is essentially no GPA. |
What is your DS interested in? Iwhat are the current schools considering? |
I don’t like that 3.5 is characterized as a “low” GPA here. No, Georgetown is not a realistic option, but NOVA isn’t their only alternative either.
There are lots of possibilities for a student with this profile. It would help to know more about geographic preferences, intended major or course of study, type of vibe/extracurriculars, etc. |
+1 |
I'd look at schools where DC's SAT score is above the 75%- they may be looking to boost those stats. |
What state are you in? |
Computing/adjacent (DS,IS, analytics, etc.). Applying to a slew of nearby publics - GMU, VCU, JMU, Tech, Del, UMBC, Pitt, etc. and Drexel, RPI and RIT. Not thinking of ED right now. Wondering if we should be applying to more privates. Hope to keep COA to about 50K/year. |
If you're a Virginia resident, there are many schools where your child would get in, lots of options. GMU, JMU, CNU, ODU, VCU, Radford, Emory and Henry, Roanoke College, etc. Your could do very well at any of them and apply to grad school if that's in the plan. Or get an AA at a community college and transfer into a Tier 1. |