<p>I was accepted to umich recently and plan on attending. Due to scheduling conflicts I had to drop some of my high school/dual enrollment classes. should I inform umich? who would I contact?</p>
<p>No reason to inform them if they don’t ask for it. I wouldn’t worry about it.</p>
<p>I would contact them.</p>
<p>don’t tell them unless they ask. something similar happened to me during senior year, and that was my guidance counselor’s advice. the idea is that there’s no reason to bring attention to yourself once you’re admitted.</p>
<p>^that. 10char</p>
<p>thanks for the replies. Whew! thats a relief. one less thing i have to worry about this year. :)</p>
<p>While it makes sense not to draw attention, don’t they state that they need to know of any new schedules?</p>
<p>I’m curious about this as well. In my case, I’m a transfer student at a community college who will be dropping a second-semester language class I realized I’m not prepared for (took the first semester a year ago and thought I’d be able to catch up, but I was wrong). I’ll either be dropping the course entirely or retaking the first-semester class.</p>
<p>If I’m accepted, then obviously I’ll need to inform them that I won’t be requesting transfer credit for this particular class. But since I haven’t received a decision yet, do I need to say anything before then? The last thing I want to do is to give the appearance I"m trying to hide something or mislead them, of course, but if I don’t HAVE to say anything I’d rather avoid it.</p>
<p>bumping this thread I was wondering the same as you… they do state to inform them… but wont that be in my year end reports?</p>
<p>My counselor was friends with people that work admissions at UM and that is what he was told. I’ll just reiterate it again, I wouldn’t recommend reporting it. Honestly, it shouldn’t play into your admissions decision at all, so it doesn’t matter either way.</p>