<p>I am a senior in high school in Utah. Because I took AP Calculus BC in my junior year, my college counselor advised me to take Calculus III at the University of Utah for this year. I took the course, got a B+ last winter, and sent the transcript to the colleges where I applied to, hoping it would help my college admission. </p>
<p>Now, I am currently enrolled in a history class at the U, and I am FAILING! I never knew that the professor do not give As or Bs. I think I am going to get a D in the class since all the college students are getting Cs. So I am thinking about not sending the final transcript (of the U) to the college where I am actually going to attend in the fall. Do you think it is okay to do that? And also, is the B+ that I got in the calculus class at the U going to be seen in my college transcript for the rest of my life? </p>
<p>Your B+ will not be part of your college transcripts unless you end up going to that same university. And I would certainly not show your D in History to any ADCOM. A D in history is hard to explain!</p>
<p>The only other reason your grades would count at college is if you transferred them or went to the same school.
Even if you did transfer your grades (which you most likely won't be doing) many schools will not calculate extra courses (summer school, etc) into your gpa because the grading varies so much from school to school.</p>
<p>Only if you want them to count as tranferring to count for credit will they be counted as for grades. I got a B in calc at my high school and wanted another try so therefore didn't use it. If I did, then the letter would transfer.</p>
<p>it was a community college course taught in my high school. sorry I didn't clarify. some of the upper level teachers were qualified for junior college too so they just did it at the our high school too.</p>
<p>They don't become apart of your grades, but they may knock out some of your core requirements. When you get to the college, they will review your transcript (if you want them to) in order to see if you can exempt out of core requirements. I believe that grad schools will see your grades of college from high school. They might need to see how all of your college requirements (possibly by exemption) were met.</p>
<p>Unless there is a specific affiliation, most schools accept the transfer course toward credits of a comparable course or elective equivalent, but the grade is not included in transcript.</p>
<p>ive taken college classes in high school and will have 29 hours when I go off to school. In one class I got a B in history , so when applying to grad school and scholarships later on will this count in? would i be able to take this course over at the college I'm going to go to and replace the grade?</p>
<p>Just white out the grade you don't want the college to see. My friend did that when he sent his grades to UPenn and it didn't matter, because the school only cared about one of the grades that wasn't whited out. :)</p>