<p>First of all, I apologize if this question has been answered already--I searched the forums for a similar situation, but I was unable to find one.</p>
<p>As the title suggests, I'm rather worried about UTD revoking my admission, but first, the background that may or may not make this situation unique. I am home schooled and in dual credit classes, so I take all but a couple of my classes at the local community college. All in all, I will have taken twelve classes this school year.</p>
<p>Due to a couple of stupid mistakes on my part (not following the syllabus requirements for two papers to the letter), I will be receiving, at the highest, an F in Government 2302 and a D in History 1302. All of my other grades will be A's, however, and last semester, I received three A's and three B's.</p>
<p>If it matters, I have not gotten anything below a B in my high school career; my grades are mostly A's. I will also be entering university with forty-two college hours (not sure how many will transfer, seems like a majority, though).</p>
<p>My question is this: are those two bad grades likely to cause the university to revoke (or even reconsider) my admission?</p>
<p>TL;DR, D and an F in college classes, rest of my grades are good, will my admission be revoked or reconsidered?</p>
<p>Jburk18: I am sorry to hear of your travails and understand your apprehension about UTD possibly revoking your admission offer. Why not ask them directly and promptly and explain your situation? Rather than ask this blog for our opinions, why not get the official response? There is no gain in delaying to ask them. Explain your situation, explain why you got the D and F’s, admit your mistakes and explain how you’ll prevent such in the future. Your strong track record should buttress our argument that this semester’s grades are an aberration. Don’t wait. Good luck.</p>
<p>I don’t think they will revoke your admission status, but you should definitely check with UTD about that. The sooner you know, the better.</p>
<p>Is there nothing you can do to bring those two grades up? Our community college district has two more weeks of classes with finals and final projects still coming up. Definitely talk to the teachers in those two classes to see if there is anything you can do to improve your situation.</p>
<p>I do know that UTD will not grant credit for classes transferred in with a grade lower than C, so you would not get credit for those two classes if they are less than C.</p>
<p>If you have a scholarship, you should talk with the scholarship people too. This could definitely affect that status.</p>