Anonymous wrote:Dean J has said multiple time that GPA is a correlation not a causation. The GPA and number of AP courses do not tell the story. It is the actual courses taken and the performance in those courses that matter. That is why you have higher GPAs/AP courses getting rejected when others are accepted. The GPA may have been high but rigor not. Or their AP courses were all in one or two areas rather than all 5 subject matters. While numbers can give you an idea of you are in range, it is ultimately the actual courses, how you did in them, along with your EC and essays that matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SAT - 1280
GPA -4.2
In state
No offense, but 1280 is very very low for an admit to UVA.
Anonymous wrote:SAT - 1280
GPA -4.2
In state
Anonymous wrote:SAT - 1280
GPA -4.2
In state
Anonymous wrote:DC EA last year from LCPS in state. Hope this helps.
SAT = 1530
UW = 4.0
Through 11th grade 6 APs with 5-5s and 1-3
12th grade took 7 APs with 7-5s
EC: made to nationals for chemistry Olympiad. Placed in (1st, 2nd, etc) in State, regional, and international piano competitions.
Awarded ROTC scholarship.
Anonymous wrote:Dean J has said multiple time that GPA is a correlation not a causation. The GPA and number of AP courses do not tell the story. It is the actual courses taken and the performance in those courses that matter. That is why you have higher GPAs/AP courses getting rejected when others are accepted. The GPA may have been high but rigor not. Or their AP courses were all in one or two areas rather than all 5 subject matters. While numbers can give you an idea of you are in range, it is ultimately the actual courses, how you did in them, along with your EC and essays that matter.