I just wanted to share a quick personal story:
I got rejected from my top two schools: Tufts and Northeastern. When I was accepted to Amherst, I was shocked and overjoyed. With a 14% acceptance rate, I hadn’t had much hope of getting in. Once I received financial aid information, I knew Amherst was the right choice. I attended the accepted students weekend and accepted the offer soon after. I changed my laptop background to the Amherst logo and ordered Amherst gear in the mail.
As a gifted/talented student at my school, I’d always taken many advanced and AP classes and had done well in all of them. Before senior year, I had gotten mostly A’s, with a couple B’s here and there. Never anything below.
In October 2017, I was diagnosed with depression; it rapidly took over my life and grew stronger every day. I found it nearly impossible to be motivated at school or to even get out of bed in the morning. First semester ended with winter break- 3 B’s on my report card. Not my best. I trudged through the end of December and completed my college applications.
Second semester was a fresh start. I was determined to come back from break motivated to work hard and finish the year strongly. Unfortunately, you can’t just wish away depression, so I quickly fell back into old habits. I started a medication midway through the semester, which ended up only making me worse; I developed an eating disorder and continued to do poorly in school. Finally, my doctor recommended a prescription change.
By the time the new medication took effect, there was two weeks of school left. I received a notice from my counselor that I was failing 5 classes. In order to receive credit for the gifted program I was enrolled in, I had to receive a C or higher in each class. I begged each teacher for mercy, and worked incredibly hard to bring up my grades. Several counselors and teachers told me it couldn’t be done, but with Prozac on my side, I met my goal.
By the end of the year, I had 5 C’s, 1 A, and 50 unexcused absences. But I had made it. And there were times when I really didn’t think I was going to. And I was going to a great college. Life was good.
Then, a couple days ago, I received an email from Amherst. Despite me explaining the circumstances surrounding my second semester grades, the email read as follows:
“As a result of the five Cs on your spring transcript, it is with regret that we have decided you are not yet fully ready to join the Amherst community. While your spring performance indicates you are not ready to begin your college career at Amherst this fall, I am willing to consider deferring your admission for a year, to the Class of 2023, rather than outright rescinding your admission. By your account in the May email you sent to our office, you are determined to improve.”
Of course, I was absolutely devastated. I was so excited to get a fresh start 14 hours away from home this fall. This is exactly what I had feared when I sent in my final transcript.
I have accepted their offer and I am preparing to take a gap year. At least they were kind enough to not rescind my acceptance due to the circumstances.
I wanted to share my story because when I was struggling to get my grades up, I was incredibly anxious that Amherst might see my terrible grades and change their mind on my acceptance. Many people told me that kind of thing “never really happens” and that I shouldn’t worry about it. During this time, I remember anxiously searching forums like this for stories of it actually happening to people, but I never really found anything.
So this is my story, for the next kid that’s anxiously searching like I was. I don’t want to make anyone more anxious, I just want to remind people that this stuff actually does happen. Hopefully, if you explain your circumstances like I did, they will be kind enough to either just defer you a year, or even look past those grades all together.