Do I have a chance of getting revoked from college?

<p>Hello there. I'm a senior in highschool and applied to all of the
University of California campuses.
Just wanted to see which ones I could get in....lol
I already got accepted to UC Riverside a month ago, but here's the problem.</p>

<p>I had 4.0 out of 4.0 all through out my freshmen~Senior first semester..
but.....ever since second semester started I just don't feel like working... :(
gosh...so unmotivated.
As a result my grades been slacking off REALLY bad.</p>

<p>Language Arts: A+
US Government: A
AP Physics: C
Career Practicum: A
Business Studies: A+
AP Calculus: C
AP Biology: D+</p>

<p>Although I'm still haven't got any acceptance/rejection letters from UC's other than UCR,
I'm now REALLY worried that my horrible senior second semester grades might
make the colleges revoke my accpetance even if they do let me in.</p>

<p>What should I do?
Should I contact the college's admissions office even if I'm not accepted yet
and do something about it?!?!?!</p>

<p>HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!</p>

<p>Definitely possible. If they accept you as a 4.0 student, you’re held to that standard. 2 Cs and a D+ certainly don’t come close to meeting that standard.</p>

<p>Not a chance. They know senior slump exists. You’re not failing anything and that’s the only thing that they would boot you for.</p>

<p>The UCs do rescind some students every spring for lower grades. A “D” will be a real red flag if it is a final semester grade. Read through the UCR acceptance carefully to see the wording of it’s conditions. Call admissions with your questions.</p>

<p>A D is not good. try try try to get that up!
If you can get it up to a C+ or hopefully a B, they will be much happier</p>

<p>Get that D to at least a C.
Anything less than a C grade is typically considered “failing”. </p>

<p>You may be feeling that senior slump, but don’t ruin this opportunity for yourself. Get back in the books and get your work done – you’ll thank yourself later.</p>

<p>If you can get the D up, you won’t have a problem. Most colleges won’t care about Cs.</p>

<p>Some won’t care about Ds, but they’re far more risky than Cs.</p>