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cmeistergeek wrote: » Assuming you're not like a double legacy. I'm a junior in high school and ranked in the top 2%. The valedictorian of last year's graduating class had a 4.5 weighted GPA (4.0 uw) and 2380 SAT score with good marks on his Calculus BC , Physics, and 3 other AP exams along with tons of ECs. He got rejected from both MIT and Harvard. I believe he's at Virginia Tech now studying computer science.
kiki162 wrote: » Not sure about the programs themselves however getting into one of those places is hard enough as it is. First thing with any ivy league school is you want to be doing lots and lots of activities within and outside of school. Also prepare to have no social life outside of school and all the other things you are doing. Spending your entire summers doing something other than sitting on your butt also helps out. Being insanely busy is the whole point. There are other schools like Johns Hopkins, Penn State and others like VA Tech that are good schools to get into. And if you can't get into the ivy league school of your choice, there's always graduate programs you can look at too. Provided that you blazed through your undergrad with a 4.0 and had a killer resume to boot.
An all-time low of 6.2 percent of applicants were offered admission to the Harvard College Class of 2015, beating records for the sixth consecutive year in what reflects a trend of increasing selectivity both at Harvard and at other top-tier universities. Notification letters were mailed yesterday afternoon to 2,158 students, who were selected from a pool of 34,950—the largest number of applicants ever.
They must be, simultaneously, a bold leader and an easygoing follower. They must consume gossip mags and classic novels with equal ferocity. They must enjoy spending countless hours holed up in the library--if and only if they spend the same number of hours at a sweaty dorm party afterward in order to forget what they studied. They must be equally comfortable dining in evening wear at a Michelin three-star French restaurant and wolfing down Oreos and peanut butter as they sit, pajama-clad, on a lumpy and off-kilter futon mattress. In other words, they must be superhuman.
dave330i wrote: » If you're smart enough to get into ivy league, then you can probably get a free ride at a good state college, where you'll stand out more, have better chance getting picked for a project, network with other bright people in school etc. Guess it's big fish in little pond vs. small fish in big pond.
cmeistergeek wrote: » Assuming you're not like a double legacy and assuming you want to study engineering or computer science. How good are the engineering and computer science programs at Harvard and MIT? I'm a junior in high school and ranked in the top 2%. The valedictorian of last year's graduating class had a 4.5 weighted GPA (4.0 uw) and 2380 SAT score with good marks on his Calculus BC , Physics, and 3 other AP exams along with tons of ECs. He got rejected from both MIT and Harvard. I believe he's at Virginia Tech now studying computer science.
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