Do I Have a Chance at Being Admitted into Georgetown?

All right. . . . I’m a sophomore a house trained, planning to go to college for premedication. My dream is University.Le Georgetown school classes that I took / take (ninth and tenth grade): • Anatomy and Physiology, Nutrition, Health, microbiology, biochemistry, physics, Algebra I, Algebra II, geometry, trigonometry, U. Member S. History, World History advanced the debate, Human Geography, Biology, Advanced Psychology, Chemistry, grammar, composition and grammar, vocabulary, writing or computer, writing format, writing, World / Italian Literature, Introduction to geography, mathematics, consumer, medical terminology (online textbooks), Art, Anthropology, Advanced Macroeconomics, Old Latin, German, history and German culture • Extracurricular activities: Volunteers-in-clinical-YFU-Library Cancer Advocate (Captain team!) – The habit of Humanity (in summer) – and the Association of MSFATTI 4. 0 GPA.PLAN unweighted (preliminary, since the PSAT in case you’re wondering) Score was 30 32.Sono also the National School Home of the company (including the National Honor Society)! (: During the summer between second and third year (summer 2010) will take some courses in my local Community College to become a phlebotomist. I’m about to become a CNA (certified nursing assistant), so you will a lot of clinical experience in hospitals and (: Clubs: – Weaving (haha) – German-Book-Club-Dance Kickboxing classeINTERROGAZIONE (finally haha): I have the opportunity to Northwestern and the school you should consider if you can not? I double major Neurobiology / Neuroscience and Psychology and minors in both biology and German. Feel.Grazie free to add something! And I choose a best answer (: tater_tot12003: I said in my question I have 4. 0 no weighted PAM, is probably even higher since I took some courses in my local Community College.

Tags: , , , ,

5 Responses to “Do I Have a Chance at Being Admitted into Georgetown?”

  1. tater_tot12003 says:

    Really depends on your GPA.

  2. cRNA in jesus' name. says:

    i think u will…try ap classes too especially ap biology and chemistry that will even help more…gud luck…

  3. Missing in Minneapolis says:

    Yes, you have a chance according to the website.

    I see your aspirations, and thats great. However, keep in mind that what you are attempting to do (in terms of all the majors, etc) is something that damn near every college students have in mind, but typically don’t achieve.

    Set your goals toward one program first and diversify from there.

  4. psuchris says:

    Wow I really think you could get into any college if you keep this up. You’ve taken tons of courses for a sophomore. I recommend taking some AP courses because they are like $82 and if you do good on them they will count as college credit in most colleges. You seem like the perfect student that most colleges would love to accept. You should really look into scholarships, too. Yes, you have a very good chance at Northwestern.

  5. MS says:

    It’ll come down to your SATs/ACTs, I think, and if you fit their profile.

    If your qualifications add to their diversity, and you appear to have the intellect to manage the coursework, they might take you.

    Also, if your parents can pay full tuition with no financial aid, your odds go way up.

    If you live up the street from them, your odds go down. If you were homeschooled in an Indonesian jungle, your odds go up.

    Who grades you? If it’s Mom giving you those four-ohs, that doesn’t mean much. If you’re taking correspondence exams, that’s a bit better, though unless they are proctored by an unbiased party, you’re just harder to assess than a public school student.

    When you fill out your applications, don’t call it “Habit” for Humanity–it’s HabitAT.

    Good luck. You still have a little time yet. You might want to try calling around to the deans of admissions at these schools and asking if there are particular elements to the application process that homeschooled students should attend to. Start doing some net research. You have lots of time.

    Do you live in a lousy school district? If not, you’re better off getting on the bus and strutting your stuff in a classroom environment. Your best bet is really to go to a public school, compete and excel. IMO, anyway.

    As a homeschooled individual, you have no real competition, and competition is a fact of life. How people deal with it and stack up against others is a factor in consideration at competitive universities.

Leave a Reply