College Grades (Madatory S/NC)

<p>So sorry if this has been asked before (and sorry for misspelling maNdatory):</p>

<p>First semester just ended and I did fine. Personally, I don't care about grades at all. I just do the work and get the grade. I took four courses this semester---two of the four were required S/NC and the other two I took for a grade. Obviously I received an "S" in the first two. I received an "A" in my sociology class (my potentional double major) and a "B" in an upper-level History course. Most of the classes that I'm interested in taking next semester (and probably will take) are mandatory S/NC. Will this be a problem with law school admissions? I was looking at future classes as well and a lot of the courses that I am interested in (arts, theatre, performing, dance) are mandatory S/NC. The only classes I'd receive for a grade are my theory/history-based theatre courses and my sociology courses, but no doubt there will be a slew of "S's" on my transcript. Will this put me at a disadvantage? Should I take at least one semester where ALL of my classes are for a grade? Thanks for the advice!</p>

<p>If its mandatory, then thats what it is. Law schools will acknowledge this as long as it is mentioned. Take as many graded courses as possible, though.</p>

<p>Thanks for the reply! So how are S/NC grades calculated into one’s law school GPA? Or are they omitted entirely?</p>