jasoncslaughter wrote:Grades are important, as are SAT scores.
Already knew that, but alright.
jasoncslaughter wrote:If your school offers an SAT prep course, I would recommend taking it.
Great advice; I'll look into it. Mainly need to learn how to concentrate and work under stress better (do a lot better when I'm not).
jasoncslaughter wrote:Also, get to know the schools you're thinking about applying to, and tailor your essays to the particular schools.
How? Can you explain/give me some examples?
jasoncslaughter wrote:Also be sure to get involved in extra curricular activities - schools want to see that you are passionate about something and are actually willing to put work into said activities.
Not sure what would be one I'd like to do. Besides, I'm already really busy with homework and watching/playing more mainstream stuff (not lowest-common-denominator stuff, though; more sophisticated, but still more popular than stuff like DoDonPachi. The only superhero film I plan to watch is
Deadpool. And no, this doesn't mean I'm quitting retro gaming.) to have common subjects to talk about with people, and making friends.
jasoncslaughter wrote:(And don't forget about outside funding when looking to finance your education. I went to a private college for undergrad, and a good bit of the funding for that degree came from random sources offering money - I even received $4,000 from the local Jimmy Buffett fan club and all I had to do was write a 2 page essay. There is no reason to pay for education, just put in the extra work and find the money.
I might've done good enough on the PSAT to make the National Merit Scholar. I don't expect be a finalist or anything; I'm just hoping I
might be commended. And I found out that any class that has levels counts towards GPA, making my weighted GPA for sophomore year 3.9 due to an
extremely easy A in Honors programming (most they did was barely scratching the surface of Python), my GPA for junior year (supposing my grades don't change) 4.14, and my cumulative GPA 4.02. How good is that?
Also: turns out that the cutoff for an A is just 92.5%. Considering that my lowest percentage is 89.1%, it shouldn't be that hard to raise everything to As by the end of the year (provided I didn't massively fuck up my History essay

).