It depends. From what it sounds like, you did not challenge yourself very much in your academic work. Having a 4.0 and then a 23 on the ACT generally means that you took easy classes in high school and were unprepared for the test. The people who review your application will notice that. With that being said, if you put a lot of work into many different extra-curricular activities (i.e. student council, sports, National Honor Society, band, etc.) then you might be alright. I remember a friend of mine almost got turned away from Madison for having a 4.0, a 26 on the ACT and being in 2 different sports. If you write good essays (make sure you have people edit them), and you continue to work hard in your senior year, your chances of getting in are fairly good in my opinion.
By the way, you can always retake the ACT. Study harder and improve on the sections you did worst on.
Soccer is involved in math because to keep score
A score of 105 is slightly below average - the average score being 110.
The credit score 650 is really not that bad. With a 650 credit score you can finance a home or car.
by being amazing and elegant.
Not really a bad score but its necessary that you must have a few denials.
depends on if you have a decent credit history. a 653 score willl result in a really high interest rate on a new car, placing the payments out of reach based on your income, resulting in you being denied. if leasing you will be denied instantly with a 653 score.
By being fast.
The ACT score range is 0-36, 36 being the best.
OF Course it does! IF you just got bankrupt it does hurt your credit score really badly!
Theoretically the highest score for the C-BASE is a 540 with the lowest being an 80.
It is a tennis score, meaning that the server has no points
Yes. They did. It of course involved different rules, but had the same concept of opposing teams throwing a ball through a hoop to score points. Of course, being the Aztecs, a more gruesome side involved the losers becoming sacrificial and the ball was a decapitated head of their foes.