Hi, I am currently in year 11 in VCE, and am really interested in applying to an American uni when it comes time for it - most likely one in the northern California region.
Ah, sorry, I really didn’t plan in writing an essay :/ I have reformatted it to make it easier to focus, and I would love it if you could take a few minutes, but entirely up to you If you cbf reading, just chuck in a quick reply based on what it says in the title
So in Australia, we have:
Years 7-12
Year 11 & 12 you do VCE, and in year 12 we do the SACs and exams and get our study scores, and then the ENTER, and I believe uni preferences are around August in Year 12.
My questions about the USA system:
Ah, sorry, I really didn’t plan in writing an essay :/ I have reformatted it to make it easier to focus, and I would love it if you could take a few minutes, but entirely up to you If you cbf reading, just chuck in a quick reply based on what it says in the title
So in Australia, we have:
Years 7-12
Year 11 & 12 you do VCE, and in year 12 we do the SACs and exams and get our study scores, and then the ENTER, and I believe uni preferences are around August in Year 12.
My questions about the USA system:
- What are the equivalents to the USA senior, sophomore and junior years? From what I see, junior is year 10?
- When do US students take the SAT/ACT? When would I need to take it?
- Will my VCE count towards uni entrance in the USA? Will any other school results (e.g. year 11) count?
- How would the VCE score be converted to a US score?
- When do US students start uni? I heard from someone that it is the equivalent to half a year after year 12 ends - so in a sense i may get a 6 month 'gap year' before US University?
- Any tips as to what subjects I should be doing? The only basic guide I have been able to find was: http://www.universityofcalifornia.e...d_adm/paths_to_adm/freshman/subject_reqs.html, whereas in Australia it is much clearer. Regarding that A-G courselist, am I screwed? Since year 7, I have done a year of history, a year of geography, English every year, Maths every year, Science and Commerce every year, 4 years of Japanese (stopped now), no Visual performing arts, and I have no idea what college-preparatory electives would be equivalent to – anyone care to explain? Would a uni enhancement for Eco be counted as a college-prep? I am currently doing MGM, MMM, ACC, PHY, ENG, and year 12 ECO. Next year I was considering doing a uni enhancement, however I am not so sure anymore. I was also thinking of doing IT software development as a Unit 3/4 next year – any suggestions on this? Most likely, the course I would be aiming for would be Computer Science with a sprinkle of business and related units (see two paragraphs down). Would I need to do Specialist maths? And also from the A-G list, it says that 7 must be taken in your last 2 years – how will I fare? Is Economics treated as a social science? If I do MGM, and Year 11 and 12 MMM would that be counted as 3 years of maths?
- What other things would I need to do to apply to a US university, and when would I need to do them by? (and yes, I will be contacting admission officers, however first I thought it would be better to ask here to gain a better basic understanding)
- What is the deal with extracurricular activities for uni entrance in the US? Is this because they are far more competitive? I haven't heard much to this note about Aus universities (if i was going to go to uni in Aus, it would most likely be Monash, or Melbourne, or maybe RMIT). Any tips regarding this? I play tennis for a club (not pro, but decent - the system is D,Dsp,C,Csp,B,Bsp,Areserve,A - I am in Bsp), though am not playing for school sport teams this year, and before considering US universities I wasn't considering it (should I?), and I don’t do any volunteering or community service activities.
A bit of background (note: I hadn’t expected to write this, as what I am interested in had always been so hard to convey to others, who would most likely have not hear of these things):
The reason I am only thinking of all of this now was that for a long time, I knew I was interested in commerce and business, and the careers I was thinking of were along the lines of project manager (this came out on top for a career test I did with my school), lawyer, business management, but I have always loved IT and am very skilled with computers, so this made me think along the lines of Business information systems, e.g. IT consulting, however programming as a job didn't really appeal to me; and I had also always wanted to run my own business (my dad does), because I am very organised and purpose driven, and want to control my own life and future, so that was why I was previously thinking along the lines of 'study commerce at Melbourne and then see where I go' – however it really annoyed me when people always had the attitude that to manage a business you need to go into the industry, work there for a few years, work your way to the top and then consider starting your own venture. However, early this year, I discovered the startup scene in Silicon Valley and other tech hotspots, and pretty much came to an epiphany - I have always loved tech, and even prior to this was extremely interested in web applications and technologies like Evernote, Dropbox etc. – and how these guys made money. And also prior to my discovery, I had been keeping spreadsheets of business ideas and iPhone app ideas, and so I realised that the startup scene seems like a perfect mix for where I want to go in life - combing technology, business, and the possibility to be very successful.
So knowing that, any suggestions on extracurricular activities I could undertake,
especially ones that I would enjoy but would still benefit me (I am most likely to be aiming for UC Berkeley, or Stanford - with a fall-back to other universities in the Silicon Valley/San Jose area)? My ideas: firstly, given the strong presence of web startups (and the fact that that is my main interest), this year I will be devoting a decent amount of time to learning the depths of web development, and then moving onto web application programming with programming languages such as Ruby and Python, with the Rails and Django or Pylons (or other) web frameworks respectively. I plan to evaluate the languages first and then choose one to focus on initially, however my gut feeling tells me that it will be Ruby with Rails, however Python and Django/Pylons or Scala and Lift are also interesting ideas. So given this, I was thinking that it could be good to offer web development services to small businesses and non-profits free of charge? Would top universities like Stanford look kindly upon this or is there no point? Would they look differently if it was for charge? Other ideas – setting up and helping elderly people in retirement homes with computers (as a door to door service)?
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