Anonymous wrote:Santa Clara also might be a good option for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, he does. He's got a great list of accomplishments and he might get accepted to all of those schools-- but he might get rejected from all of them, too. What about adding a few more UC (or Cal State) campuses?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: He thinks his list is too long already.
Bay Area public school:
Intended Major: Biochem/Chem
GPA: 3.73 UW, 4.2W -
No class rank
Freshman: 3.41 UW 3.75W (5 B's 1 C) -> Sophomore: 4.0 UW 4.33W (all A's) -> Junior: 3.92 UW 4.59W (1 B+ in meaningless class)
SAT: 1580 // 780/800
APs: Micro 5, Macro 4, Stats 5, Bio 4, Chem 5, BC 5 and planning on taking APES, Physics 1, Lit;
ECs:
Tennis Varsity Captain (our team is current league champion)
ChemE internship (1 year)
Tutoring organization head officer(3 years)
DECA Chapter Officer and placed as a world finalist twice, 2nd at states once (3 years)
Founder of Biology/Chem Club at my school with large presence on campus (2 years)
Private tennis coach (4 years)
Shadowed physician (2 months)
Commercial laboratory assistant (1 year)
Tufts
Emory (ED1)
WashU
Rice
Northwestern
Vanderbilt
UNC Chapel Hill (EA)
University of Michigan (EA)
Cornell University
Stanford University
UCLA
UC Berkeley
You absolutely need safeties. Bay Area high school alum here who graduated in 2010s. UCs are not safeties but also it is not difficult to apply to all of them at once (no separate essays, just check the box). Before your applications are due (around October), you will know if you are in the special top 10% program in the UCs that will guarantee admission to one of the lower-ranked UCs (excluding Berkeley and LA). If you receive that, then I would proceed with your list without safeties. If you don't receive that (because it signals your son is not that competitive compared to his peers), then you absolutely need to change that list unless you are okay with not getting into any schools.
I hate to be the bearer of bad news but those stats are unfortunately normal by Bay Area standards. Based on the stats, your son might get into some of those schools. When I went to college, a single B on your transcript, let alone a C, knocked you out of the running for Berekely and LA.
I am remain intrigued by how different posters’ experiences area. My niece and nephew both from Bay Area public got into (no hooks) Cal and UCLA with strong gpa’s but definitely some Bs, and this was within the past 5-7 years. They did both qualify for the program you mentioned guaranteeing admission to certain UCs.
💯 agree that within UC it is so easy to add colleges, why not add UCSB and UCSD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: He thinks his list is too long already.
Bay Area public school:
Intended Major: Biochem/Chem
GPA: 3.73 UW, 4.2W -
No class rank
Freshman: 3.41 UW 3.75W (5 B's 1 C) -> Sophomore: 4.0 UW 4.33W (all A's) -> Junior: 3.92 UW 4.59W (1 B+ in meaningless class)
SAT: 1580 // 780/800
APs: Micro 5, Macro 4, Stats 5, Bio 4, Chem 5, BC 5 and planning on taking APES, Physics 1, Lit;
ECs:
Tennis Varsity Captain (our team is current league champion)
ChemE internship (1 year)
Tutoring organization head officer(3 years)
DECA Chapter Officer and placed as a world finalist twice, 2nd at states once (3 years)
Founder of Biology/Chem Club at my school with large presence on campus (2 years)
Private tennis coach (4 years)
Shadowed physician (2 months)
Commercial laboratory assistant (1 year)
Tufts
Emory (ED1)
WashU
Rice
Northwestern
Vanderbilt
UNC Chapel Hill (EA)
University of Michigan (EA)
Cornell University
Stanford University
UCLA
UC Berkeley
You absolutely need safeties. Bay Area high school alum here who graduated in 2010s. UCs are not safeties but also it is not difficult to apply to all of them at once (no separate essays, just check the box). Before your applications are due (around October), you will know if you are in the special top 10% program in the UCs that will guarantee admission to one of the lower-ranked UCs (excluding Berkeley and LA). If you receive that, then I would proceed with your list without safeties. If you don't receive that (because it signals your son is not that competitive compared to his peers), then you absolutely need to change that list unless you are okay with not getting into any schools.
I hate to be the bearer of bad news but those stats are unfortunately normal by Bay Area standards. Based on the stats, your son might get into some of those schools. When I went to college, a single B on your transcript, let alone a C, knocked you out of the running for Berekely and LA.
Anonymous wrote:He should just click off the boxes for the mid to lower tier UCs. No extra work. Even if he's never going to go to Riverside or Irvine, you gotta at least apply in case everything else goes down the shitter.
Anonymous wrote: He thinks his list is too long already.
Bay Area public school:
Intended Major: Biochem/Chem
GPA: 3.73 UW, 4.2W -
No class rank
Freshman: 3.41 UW 3.75W (5 B's 1 C) -> Sophomore: 4.0 UW 4.33W (all A's) -> Junior: 3.92 UW 4.59W (1 B+ in meaningless class)
SAT: 1580 // 780/800
APs: Micro 5, Macro 4, Stats 5, Bio 4, Chem 5, BC 5 and planning on taking APES, Physics 1, Lit;
ECs:
Tennis Varsity Captain (our team is current league champion)
ChemE internship (1 year)
Tutoring organization head officer(3 years)
DECA Chapter Officer and placed as a world finalist twice, 2nd at states once (3 years)
Founder of Biology/Chem Club at my school with large presence on campus (2 years)
Private tennis coach (4 years)
Shadowed physician (2 months)
Commercial laboratory assistant (1 year)
Tufts
Emory (ED1)
WashU
Rice
Northwestern
Vanderbilt
UNC Chapel Hill (EA)
University of Michigan (EA)
Cornell University
Stanford University
UCLA
UC Berkeley
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Add Cal Poly Pomona and UCSC as safeties.
Pomona is not a safety for anyone
Anonymous wrote:Add Cal Poly Pomona and UCSC as safeties.