Jstar1 wrote:wow fena you are at U of M? cause thats where I am
No way! What year are you? I'm guessing you're in Engineering, so do you live on North Campus?
Ownage wrote:So I have a few questions, I have been curious about asking someone from a top college you don't have to answer them but it would help me if you do

1)What was your SAT score?
2)What was your gpa?
3)How many extracurricular did you have?
I only have NHS as a an extracurricular activity atm. Its not that I don't want to take more, but my school doesn't offer many other then sports and I don't have a ride to depend on, I am thinking about trying out for a sport next year so how well do you think my chances would be with two? Not applying for U of M, just asking about general mid range unis.
1) I got a 2370 on the SAT, and a 35 on the ACT.
2) My GPA was 4.01, but that's pretty low for my school. What's more important, I think, is class rank and what percentile you fall into, since that's a better measure of how you compare to your classmates. For me, I was only in the top 11%, since I didn't really work as hard as I should have in high school.
3) I had quite a few extracurriculars. Like you, I was in NHS. I was also the captain of my school's wrestling team, vice president of the school computer club (hah), vice president of the school's Chinese club, and then just a member in a bunch of other organizations like psychology club and the like. Outside of school, I had some volunteer hours and 12 or so years of piano, so I was in decent shape.
Two extracurriculars isn't anything noteworthy, to be honest. If I were you, I'd find some organizations to join at your school - there have to be some that you at least have some remote interest in. You don't even have to attend the meetings if they're not required. Like I mentioned earlier, having a good deal of extracurriculars is one of those things that don't really make your transcript better, but can make your transcript worse. At the end of the day, colleges look at how you compare to the other applicants in the pool. That one extra club you joined might separate you from the rest of the crowd.
Volunteer hours outside of just NHS aren't a bad idea, either. I know you said that you don't have a dependable ride, but you could try to carpool up with a friend and find some community service you can do. Colleges want students who don't just study all day long; ideally, what they want to see is an applicant who excels academically but is interested in the world around him as well.
aznronin wrote:So, I am planning to major in Chemical Engineering, do you know people that are majoring in Chemical Engineering? and apparently from what I've heard, it's actually one of the hardest of all the engineering disciplines, would you say that's true?
Chem E is hard, man, there's no doubt about it. My girlfriend is a freshman at UT studying Chem E (long-distance, haha...), and she's swamped with work. Like Jstar mentioned though, the end result is definitely worth it. For example, she's thinking about working in the petro industry after graduation, and there are some pretty ludicrous opportunities there. If you like math and science, it's something you should look into further.
I'm not sure how credible Yahoo articles are, but here's
an interesting article I read the other day regarding disappearing jobs...