Most likely not. Those grades do not merit placement in a school that has been consistently ranked in the top 2 schools in the country by US News & World Report. Your unweighted cummulative GPA should be upwards of a 3.8 and your weighted should be upwards of a 4.6. And I'd also like to add that you should probably steer your focus away from Ivy Leagues. If those were your grades in high school, you won't be able to keep up with the coursework at Ivy League colleges, such as Harvard. They consistently require you to perform at an incredibly high level and require extreme dedication to schoolwork. Your grades in high school reflect that you received lower to average grades, and frankly, Harvard would eat you alive. However, I would aim for a state university if you have strong SAT/ACT scores, or a community college with the intention of transfering. In all honesty, while Harvard may be the most prestigious, getting a degree from a state school is by no means less important. And you may even be happier at a school that doesn't also consistently rank up at the top for the most depressed students.
the 1st year is Freshman. The second year is sophomore. The third year is junior and the fourth year is senior.
Freshmen are first-year students in high school or college, sophomores are second-year students, and seniors are fourth-year students. Each term corresponds to a specific year of study within academic institutions.
first year- freshman 2nd- sophomore 3rd- junior 4th- senior
Students are typically classified by the number of credits they have earned. The following is particular to colleges and universities that operate on a regular two semester academic year. * Freshman - fewer than 30 credits * Sophomore - 30 to 59 credits * Junior - 60 to 89 credits * Senior - 90 credits and above
In high school 9th grade= Freshman, 10th grade= Sophomore, 11th grade= Junior and 12th grade= Senior The same progression of names is used for the first four years in college.
Senior iz oldest. First itz Freashman, then sophmore, junior, then senior. For a total of 4 years
Of course.
You might still be able to get into Yale if you graduated high school taking AP classes and receiving honors awards if you have a good reason for suffering your first semester of your freshman year. Sometimes a person with a lower GPA and better extra curricular activities will do better in an application than a person with excellent grades and no outside interests.
Yes- he first enrolled at Princeton University but dropped out before the first semester ended.
I wish I knew trhe answer....
You have one bad and one good semester. I'm guessing math wasn't your strong point
Yes in his junior year around the first semester he weighed 300 pounds