<p>I reported falsely about my admissions (<- I reported that I got rejected in every college but one - but in fact, I got admitted in severals).. as our relationship was not that good.</p>
<p>Will colleges send the schools information about who accepted their offer? </p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>Do think this through carefully. Perhaps your parent can drop the counselor a note later about all of your acceptances. This information is useful for students that counselor will work with in the future. If those students have interests, grades, and test scores similar to yours, they will want to have a good sense of their options.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Wow, you *really *showed your guidance counselor, didn’t you? Oh, wait, no you didn’t. What possible purpose were you hoping to serve? </p>
<p>In addition to Happymom’s very good point that withholding this information doesn’t hurt your guidance counselor in any way, but does possibly harm students who come after you, I’d ask whether you have younger siblings. If so, you could be poisoning the well they’re going to have to drink from.</p>
<p>This is akin to not doing your homework because you don’t like your teacher. It doesn’t hurt the teacher one bit, but it makes you look like a really petty person with really bad judgment.</p>
<p>OP, I’m curious as to your thought process behind what you did?</p>
<p>It’s usually students telling their GC that they got in to schools that they did not because they are embarrassed to tell the truth.</p>