First, you are required to present transcripts from all colleges you attended. If you fail to provide a transcript, then you could be expelled later for falsifying your application.
When they look at your resume you will have to explain what you were doing during that year -- you weren't in school? What were you doing? Give us some references.... They can call your references and ask them whether you were in school while you were working there.... one single answer from one reference and your lie would be caught and you would be out of luck.
In order to be either a physician, a pharmacist or an attorney, you must have a clean record. Even the idea that you would consider lying about your record in order to get into professional school means that you probably are not a good candidate.
Honesty is the best policy.
2007-04-05 06:17:35
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answer #1
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answered by matt 7
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Yep
They contact your last school (you give them) and on that listing it shows who else has asked for or received transcripts. They may then check with those other places.
However some colleges have requirements. One I looked at would NOT consider college transcipts of less than 24 credit hours, but went straight for the highschool transcripts.
2007-04-05 06:14:28
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I do exactly no longer see somebody who hates chemistry and struggles to make a C in an undergraduate biology direction as decrease out to be the two a physician or a pharmacist, quite whilst those are the two maximum severe subjects for the two certainly one of those careers. i could advise the classics or literature direction, because of fact it does not look like the sciences are your reliable experience. Plus, in case you could advance your GPA adequate to get it over a three.5, then regulation college remains an option.
2016-10-21 02:42:58
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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As long as you didn't use any of the credits from the school where you did poorly, i think you can get away without mentioning it. If the credits weren't part of the degree you graduated with, it is like you started over after the bad period. Let's say you went to university A, failed everything, then went to university B, did fine, got your degree...
University A didnt matter because you never used any of the credits.
2007-04-05 05:57:54
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answer #4
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answered by sara 2
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if you did poorly at one college and transferred to another and did well there, your first college's transfer credits would still appear on the second college's transcripts
2007-04-05 05:55:18
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answer #5
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answered by Troy 6
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For the most part they do not care. Threre only concern is that you currently did pass all prerequisite classes and have an acceptable GPA.
2007-04-05 05:48:39
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answer #6
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answered by levindis 4
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