You have to research the schools and the major. The ones that my DD applied to (big state flagships) all preferred and prioritized kids with high GPA and high rigor over SAT scores. She is a business major and has gotten into IU, Penn State, Clemson, Michigan State, Pitt, Delaware, South Carolina, and didn't submit test scores but has a high GPA and great ECs applicable to her major. |
T20 when OP said kid is bottom half of class with GPA? Absolutely no |
| More than one C, even if in a foreign language, is going to make most of the names being thrown around unlikely. Look at schools with at least a 40 percent acceptance rate. |
This. UVA’s 75th percentile has a 4.5; median is a 4.4; even bottom 25th percentile has a 4.2. |
| Yes, UVA wants a 3.8 from the top DC private my kid attends. If you can get into UVA, you can get into an Ivy. I believe that outside of one ED kid and one athletic recruit last year, every single one of the other UVA admits were also admitted to an Ivy. |
Those are weighted GPA’s. You can’t compare them to unweighted private school GPA’s. My kids go to a private that doesn’t weight. The highest possible GPA is 4.0, and yet unhooked kids go to UVA every year. I am not saying OP’s will get in, just that this comparison is irrelevant. |
This is why I find GPA comparisons ridiculous. I don't know why colleges bother--I no longer bother looking at the data. Even MoCo, FFX County, and Arlington Co all weigh classes differently. For it to be somewhat useful, they should all only use UW GPAs and, even then you still need a lot more data to understand like average number of APs etc... which of course doesn't help with schools that don't offer APs. |
Right. But those of us with kids at a Big3 are telling OP you need a high GPA for UVA—like 3.8 at NCS/STA or Sidwell. It used to be 3.6-3.7 for UVA from the Big3 if you were a legacy/URM, but those days are over. |
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This candidate is a bit of a puzzle: strong school, weak GPA, very strong in math. The only thing that seems certain is that even with the best advice there will be a lot of uncertainty and stress.
I’d like to suggest a safety: apply early in the fall to the University of Minnesota. Minnesota has rolling admissions and a 75% acceptance rate. The Niche scatterplot, for what it’s worth, shows high SAT-low GPA kids getting in. This year the supplement was 200 words on why this major, which sounds like it would be easy for this kid to knock out. The math department is well regarded (tied, in this year’s USNWR reputation score, with CMU and JHU), and it offers a BS degree that does not require foreign language. It’s also a big school (which she wants) in a fun city. And you will save so much in tuition that the new boots and jacket will be trivial expenditures. Assuming she gets in, that will put a floor under her possible outcomes, relieving a lot of stress and letting her focus on her most preferred schools. If by chance she does not get in, then you will all have early notice to panic. Which sounds bad, but is actually much better than panicking after ED results come out in December, because it will give you time to get more applications in to EA schools before the November 1 deadline. |
Maybe but OP said that GPA is bottom half at the school. That translates universally. A bottom half GPA at a school is not likely to get into a t20, regardless of SAT |
| 3.4? Did she get a “B” on her research paper? Makes it look “bought” if you ask me. |
Yet another example from DCUM. Math is “hard,” humanities are “easy.” And yet… |
| OP, please consider Oxford and Cambridge. These schools will not care about your GPA. They will look at your AP scores. |
If she has AP scores. Some of these private schools discourage them… |
| In general you should avoid public schools as they typically want a high GPA. I don’t know why UVA was mentioned so many times. It’s not the right fit. This is a mathy kid. She should look into stem oriented schools and programs. |