<p>This is probably a very dumb question.</p>
<p>i noticed that there is a way to submit the mid year grade report online but do they need an official copy of the report?
If they need the copy, what should i put with it?</p>
<p>This is probably a very dumb question.</p>
<p>i noticed that there is a way to submit the mid year grade report online but do they need an official copy of the report?
If they need the copy, what should i put with it?</p>
<p>they dont need an official report. You're bound by the Honor Code though, so if you report you have all As and you end up with Bs and Cs, they might rescind your admission.</p>
<p>thanks you very much</p>
<p>i did them online but my schools sends them anyways....im guessing it doesnt matter as long as I did it online</p>
<p>For those who have posted mid-year grades "online" how did you do this? Is there an official site on one's UVA home page? I don't see one.
Did you just e-mail them your grades?
I want to be sure I do this properly, thanks for any input.</p>
<p>If you applied online, check your account (you should have seen the prompt back when you hit submit).</p>
<p>If you applied on paper, send the paper form.</p>
<p>log on to your application and click "Apply Online" and there should be a link to it</p>
<p>How much weight does the midyear report have?...could it take someone who is borderline from a waitlist to an acceptance?</p>
<p>Thanks Dean J and jaw. I went to my online homepage and followed the directions and I can see clearly what I need to do.
I appreciate your blog Dean J, and follow it regularly. It's very interesting to read about college admissions from your perspective.
Lastly, I got a chuckle from your response on another thread where the person was charged $180. You're right, they knew how to rectify that situation.</p>
<p>^^o yea i saw that thread too.....it seemed like Dean j was annoyed with them lol</p>
<p>"How much weight does the midyear report have?...could it take someone who is borderline from a waitlist to an acceptance?"</p>
<p>I'm not an expert, Jaw, but I know that colleges in general weight grades the most in making their decisions. While testing and what not is important too, they care more about your dedication to school over the past four years than the SAT, which only represents one day of your life. I would think that if you had all A's and B's in AP and honors courses on the midyear report when your past grades might have been mediocre, they would definitely take that into consideration.</p>
<p>It also works the other way. If you are suddenly getting C's and D's, it would easily take you from definite acceptance to rejection.</p>