Better to Withdraw or get a D or F in the class?

<p>Hello,
I have a question for everyone.
I am worried about UCD rescinding my admission.
Should I withdraw from the class with a W?
Would that be better over a D or a F?</p>

<p>It seems unlikely that i can get a C. Do you think my teacher can help me?</p>

<p>I am so so worried. Please help me. I love UCD. I wanna go there!! :D</p>

<p>first talk to your teacher and see if you can get a c-
does your school let you withdraw so late in the semester?
you would also have to inform davis that you are withdrawing from the course before
did you just slack hella this semester or did you cheat and get a 0 or something</p>

<p>yes i can still withdraw, but is that better?
i had some personal problems thats why it dropped… :frowning:
i did not cheat…</p>

<p>im worried about ucd rescinding me…plz help</p>

<p>If your personal problems are valid, write to UCD and explain what happened. Understand that you will need to do more than just say you had personal problems.</p>

<p>Either withdrawing or getting a D/F could possibly cause UCD to rescind your admission (although I think a D/F is a tad better than a withdraw honestly). Speak to an admissions committee member or something in UCD and discuss your options.good luck</p>

<p>Looking at the question I’m going to assume you’re a transfer student, since I’m not sure if high schools let students withdraw. :slight_smile: If you’re a freshman admit, just ignore this response.</p>

<p>I think it’s going to depend heavily on the class. Is the class in question one of your “REQUIRED” courses for your target major, is it a “recommended” course, or is it just a GE course? I chose to withdraw from my second semester of O-Chem at my CC, but the second semester is listed as a “highly recommended” course rather than a “required” course for transfers. It’s been eleven days since I submitted the changes, and they say that they’ll get back to you within ten days if there is a change to your admission status, so it’s looking to be okay.</p>

<p>As always, though, if you have the option, ALWAYS speak to an official at the school. They’re going to be able to give you information that is (usually) correct and consistent, though it’s a bureaucracy so things are always going to be questionable. ;)</p>