<p>i took a class over the summer at a cc to fulfill one of my hs graduation requirements. but my hs counselor ended up saying that i didnot need to add the transcript to my hs record because i was wrong and didnot need the graduation requirement in the first place. so i then applied to college with only my hs transcript, and now i am found out that i should included the cc transcript in the beginning . i am now a sophomore and found out that AMCAS requires me to include the cc transcript when applying. so, do i need to still include the cc transcript even though nothing has transferred to where i go now? does AMCAS chek every cc to see if the appliant has a transcript there?</p>
<p>im not trying to deceive. i got an A in the course. im asking because it has nothing to do with my major or any of my college requirements. when i looked for this on my own, it said if the course transferred, then for sure i would need to include the transcript.</p>
<p>AMCAS REQUIRES you to submit your entire academic record, regardless of what your HS used the course for, regardless of what your university used a course for, regardless of whatever weight you believe it doesn't carry. Failure to submit all required documentation, or even worse, knowingly deceive AMCAS (and by association, the Medical Schools) is a serious ethical violation, one that could jeopardize not only your acceptance or your matriculation, but also your continued enrollment in medical school on down the line. Basically, you'd be at risk of major sanctions up until the day you graduated medical school, and I'm not sure that you'd be completely out of the woods during residency. </p>
<p>BDM has personally seen a fourth year student be kicked out of school for an ethical violation during the the application process.</p>
<p>In short: JUST DON'T DO IT.</p>
<p>Seriously, when you begin filling out the AMCAS, they'll ask you about all the schools you've attended, and then give you form letters, pre-addressed, to print out and send to any and all schools you've attended, requesting them to send your transcript to the AMCAS office. It's practically painless. You may, depending on the CC, have to research and see if they charge a fee for copies of transcripts, but it may cost you five bucks if they're really gouging you. </p>
<p>Seriously there is ABSOLUTELY NO NEED to not send transcripts, and there are serious ramifications if you don't and are caught.</p>