Do I have to report ALL grades to grad school?

<p>Hi I'm just curious as to if I'd have to report Community College grades to graduate school as well? This summer I'm taking two online core community college classes to transfer it over to my University. If I were to not get an A then I wouldn't want to transfer the grade over to my grad school overall uga portion of the applications... To avoid this would I just not send over that particular credit/grade to my current University?</p>

<p>Thanks.</p>

<p>As far as I’ve been told, I’m pretty sure that you are required to send transcripts from every college you’ve attended.</p>

<p>Yes, you need to submit all. If they find that you did not, you risk way too much.</p>

<p>It depends on the graduate school.</p>

<p>Stanford only asked for transcripts from colleges that I had attended for at least one full year. Austin, on the other hand, wanted transcripts from absolutely all colleges (including online courses and credits that did not count towards my degree).</p>

<p>You can always contact the program and ask (without giving your name if you do this via phone) if you can’t find an answer online (I did this for my own study abroad transcript situation)</p>

<p>When you apply for admission to a degree program at an accredited college or university in the US you are obligated to provide official copies of your transcripts from all the places you have studied. This is because when they are up for re-accreditation, the team will walk through the registrars office and pull random student files. If a transcript is missing from one of those files, that will cause a big ruckus. This is not about you. It is about the colleges and universities playing nice with each other. Send all of the transcripts. Even if you don’t need to do that with an initial application, as soon as you are official, they will need them.</p>

<p>How do I know this? I was almost thrown out of a graduate-level program when a routine audit of the student files found that I was missing one transcript for a six semester-hour undergraduate course taken during a summer term more than thirty (yes, 30) years earlier. That the credits were recorded as transferred to another college was not good enough. I had to have an official copy sent.</p>

<p>Over the years I have taken courses for credit at seven different community colleges, colleges, and universities. To save myself the headache of requesting that many transcripts for a while, I ordered five sealed copies of each and put them in my filing cabinet.</p>