<p>I am on the verge of failing Phyiscs C, should I drop it? What are the repurcussions? and what is the likelihood of getting my admissions rescinded if I drop it? And I am taking 3 other Ap classes along with Physics C</p>
<p>if you get below a C in the course, you might have to retake physics @ local community college in the summer, like a friend of mine who did poorly in a course in senior year... it's a case-by-case thing. so no one here is going to be able to judge whether or not you'll be dropped. the best you can do is ask or call some from admissions and ask for their advice</p>
<p>they can also rescind your admission if you drop the course...just something to keep in mind</p>
<p>Ask admissions directly.</p>
<p>you should read over the page for admitted students at <a href="http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/NewBruins/NSG_Freshmen.htm%5B/url%5D">http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/NewBruins/NSG_Freshmen.htm</a></p>
<p>on the link under "report changes" it says you must notify admissions "If you received any D or F grades, or if your senior year unweighted GPA will fall below 3.00." "If you dropped any courses which were listed on your application."</p>
<p>I suggest you call and ask them directly for advice, as Mallomar recommends. You have to send a final transcript so they're going to find out eventually if you do drop it, and you're better off finding out what the consequences will be now while you still have other college options then getting a letter over the summer saying "sorry, don't come" if that's what dropping it will mean.</p>
<p>I have a similar situation, but I'll be able to switch into Calc AB instead of dropping BC completely, so do you think this will affect my chances (I can come up with a sob story excuse, which is true, but a tad exaggerated)? Also, should I wait until I'm accepted to notify colleges, or do it immediately with all of them that I applied to even though I don't know if I'm even accepted or if this would affect my being accepted/rejected?</p>
<p>I think you should notify them as soon as you make the change.</p>