This! Max out in all five core subjects, AND do well in them. That’s what my kid did: 1470 SAT and 4.3 gpa. Admitted ED. |
+1. You definitely want to make sure you’re not going to one of these schools (ranked in order) Thomas Jefferson High School Open High School Langley High School Richmond Community High Schoo Woodson High School Oakton High School Meridian High School McLean High School Marshall High School Madison High School |
|
It is hard - I have heard a 4.4 is the minimum GPA from a NOVA public (McLean, Langley, etc), and I think you're almost forced to ED.
While a PP said "tons" of kids have already committed, when you're talking about a class size of 600-625 at McLean in 2026, 16 kids is not a ton (Less than 15 of these were ED). And, it is not guaranteed every year. Last year (2025), McLean sent 17 of a class of 625 (I think less than 5 were admitted ED). Again, wouldn't call that a ton. |
|
The best way to figure this out is to check your school’s scattergrams in Naviance and use the “Compare Me” feature. The scattergrams show where your student falls compared to other applicants from the school and the Compare Me will give you a number of how many applied and were accepted. This was very accurate for our kids. Our Naviance showed that over 4.5 was the sweet spot. There were some denials over a 4.5, but those were outliers.
You’re mostly competing against students at your own school, not across NOVA. AP and IB classes are the same everywhere. UVA is still pulling from the top of each school’s applicant pool, and there are strong students at every school. Also, “lower performing” schools usually aren’t that way because of weaker teachers or curriculum—it’s about demographics and resources. Our kids went to a public IB school that people often dismiss, took rigorous classes, did sports and clubs, and all went on to great colleges. |
This is true. The 75th percentile of entering students at UVA had a 4.5: median was a 4.4: bottom 25th percentile had a 4.2. Generally, if you are an unhooked kid in one of the top NOVA schools you need to be in the 75th percentile which means 4.5+ GPA, 35 ACT, 1510+ SAT. Top 6% rank. 10-12 APs. Most rigorous box checked. This was all born true in the recent EA admissions results thread here wherein every single kid who got into UVA for EA had hit the 75th percentile. |
o Completely false. Your high school counselor submits a “school and class profile” each year, which is submitted along with your child’s transcript. It provides all the information needed to rank your kid: GPA range and number of kids who have that GPA in your kid’s class, the number and types of AP courses offered (for example, Langley offers 31 AP courses) and the percentage of your kids’ classmates who have taken or are taking those AP courses. It takes the college reader only a few second to guesstimate rank within class using these documents. This is how colleges protect high schools who want to claim “we don’t rank”. You need to schedule a meeting with your counselor and ask the tough questions - is my kid taking the right AP courses? Is he on target to get the “max rigor” box checked off? If not, what does he need to do now? What is his approximate rank? They may hem and haw. Be assertive. |
1/3 of kids enrolled are test optional, which means their academic ability is much, much lower than a 1510/35. lol. Probably scoring a 1300 on the SAT. I know, I know. There is no grade inflation, GPAs are more accurate than test scores. Just pointing out the flaw in your blather. You are delusional about UVA. Come back when they are TEST REQUIRED. |
|
The formula is pretty straightforward, but you need to check all the boxes.
If you’re a white male from NOVA, you need to take AP classes for most subjects starting in the tenth grade and do well in them (mostly As), do well on the AP tests (mostly 5s, but some 4s are fine), score a 34/1500 on the ACT/SAT. Have some normal extracurriculars, but nothing crazy. Write a good common app essay. Basically, show that you’re a smart kid, but you don’t need crazy leadership or national awards. |
+1. |
Not true in our case, under 75% in GPA and SAT, got in. (Going to VT though.) |
|
For UVA, you need to be top 5% of the class. For WM, top 10%.
It’s not that the schools require this, but if you have the GPA to land in these spots, you’ll probably have taken the number of AP classes and gotten the grades to have a top weighted GPA. And, if you have that background, you’ll probably score well on the AP and ACT/SAT tests. There’s high correlation between all this stuff. |
Looking at SCOIR, I just realized that the rough top 5% is true at my DC’s private school too. I see zero acceptances outside the very top corner of the scattergram (highest GPA and test scores). |
| Just be sure to take at least four years of foreign language. Don’t bother applying with less. |
+1. This is important to understand. |
| It is hard, OP. Really hard. Congrats to those that were accepted! |