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if i failed just one class for one semester with a failing grade in high school, when the colleges look at that, will that affect the chances to get into a college?

2007-05-06 10:19:47 · 4 answers · asked by rockingorangejuice 2 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

4 answers

Of course they will, but they are more interested in a pattern than in an individual class.

If the class that you failed is a core class like English or Math then they may have a problem, but if it was an elective or an extra class say shop, electronics, or even basket weaving then that F is going to weigh less in their decision.

The College Admission Board is looking at the OVER ALL student, not the parts of the sum. I had a poor showing in typing Trig, and Pre-calculus class when I was in college (a C, D and D respectively), but I had no problem getting into the college I wanted and they even offered me a chance to join the honors program. They looked at how my base performance was how I did on the college placement exams, and what I tried to do. My major did require Trig and Pre-calculus as well as calculus, but I could take those in college. The fact that I had even tried to take them in high school showed that I was attempting to reach high.

I wasn't a stellar student and was ranked in only the top 1/4 of the school with mostly As and Bs. I didn't do sparkling well on my SAT either, but it all showed that I had good potential. I was bright and articulate at the interview and I showed them that I really wanted into their college.

When you go out in the real world no one is going to care if you made a B or an A in a class, they will look at your overall performance. If you have a decent GPA, if you are involved in extracurricular activities and if you show the potential to be a good student then you have a very good chance to get into the college of your choice.

And if you don't get in then the world doesn't have to end. Attend a semester at a lesser college or a junior college. Once you proved that you can hack it then reapply to the college that you wanted to get into. With a good semester under your belt they are more likely to want to admit you.

2007-05-06 10:45:35 · answer #1 · answered by Dan S 7 · 0 0

I doubt that those "severe college" classes made it onto your transcript. those training are many times on your midsection college checklist as honors training and are merely used for placement purposes in severe college. once you're relatively worried circulate to the coaching counselor at your college and get/purchase a duplicate of your expert transcript. in all probability ought to do this besides to make helpful that your grades are recorded properly and any volunteer hours you declared have been recorded. training you soak up severe college all get added into you GPA that schools look at. yet overall performance in eleventh grade is traditionally the main needed. yet whilst your grades are not as severe as you pick then verify you in addition to might stand out for something else- extracurricular, volunteer, etc.

2016-10-04 11:32:08 · answer #2 · answered by aharon 4 · 0 0

If you have a good reason for it a competitive school may overlook it but you will have to address it straight on and honestly in you application and have great references from teachers.
Admission committees realize that people can go through ruff patches. If all your other grades are really good then no pattern of poor grades will be evident. If you have a lot of average grades then less competitive schools will probably be your only choice.

2007-05-06 11:07:06 · answer #3 · answered by ZebraFoxFire 4 · 0 0

it really depends on the college. Harvard, Yale... maybe. most schools in the U.S.... not so much. If you have decent grades overall (around 2.5 GPA or better) you shouldn't have problems getting into most schools.
remember, colleges also look at your ACT/SAT and other stuff like sports, voluneer work, jobs, and other extracurricular activities.

If you are very concerned, call up or email some admissions reps at colleges you are interested in and ask about minimmum GPA requirements or guidelines

2007-05-06 10:34:37 · answer #4 · answered by FIGJAM 6 · 0 0

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