<p>I've already been admitted/selected which college I'll be going to next year. All through high school I had a 3.75 GPA and took plenty of AP classes, now suddenly 2.6 this quarter. What the what. Okay, specific grades:</p>
<p>AP Math-- D
AP Euro-- B
AP Psych-- B+
AP Eng-- B+
Elective-- B+</p>
<p>Clearly slightly slipping in everything just a little, but mostly really can't handle god damn math, I've been struggling all year and now I'm worried that this class is going to get me rescinded from college. </p>
<p>What should I do? Should I send the report card to the college now and explain to them that I'm mostly having difficulty with this one class and am trying to get better, and maybe tell them about some more of my achievements since getting into their school? Regardless they require an end of the year report.</p>
<p>Get the D to at least a C, hopefully a B if you can. Don’t send the grade until the end of the year, so you have time to improve it.</p>
<p>You’re doing ok except the math. Do everything you can to get that to at least a C, if not a B–tutoring, studying a ****load, extra practice problems, asking the teacher if s/he’d recommend anything you can do to bump up your grade, etc. etc.</p>
<p>It’d be nice if you could bring a few of those B+s up to A-s, too, but it’s not as necessary as bumping the math grade I’d say. Don’t worry, you still have time.</p>
<p>Man, I did the complete opposite. My grades have been a bit crap my first three years, but once I got to senior year I’ve been getting nearly straight As (except for a ****ing 89.3 in Psychology). And it’s not like I have a slacker schedule–five AP classes; no lunch or study hall; the only non-AP classes are Chinese, German, and gym (only taking gym because it’s a requirement). Too bad I got the grades too late for it to make any difference in applying to college.</p>
<p>As for your situation, I don’t think one D will be too bad as long as your raise some of your other grades to As. Try your best to raise it to a C, obviously, but if you can’t I don’t think they’ll un-admit you. Do not send them the grades until the end of the year.</p>