<p>When I was reading through the checklist again, I noticed that they indicated that any inconsistencies would cause admission to be revoked.
When applied, I put down a grade as an English grade as a B (which it was at the time on my transcript), but after my acceptance, I found out that that B had been changed to an A (which it should've been in the 1st place- there was a computer error), and I had been asking for that grade change ever since I found out about the grade.
Should I email or call UCSD about this? What should I do?</p>
<p>Edit: I also just realized that when I put down my coursework for 12th grade, I did not mention Economics because it was a semester course and I was taking Government at the time... (and for some reason I thought civics = econ..)
Will this cause me to lose my acceptance?</p>
<p>Just call them, explain yourself (briefly) and make the corrections. Trivial errors like this happen pretty often and no one gets admission revoked over it. It’s not a big deal, but get to it as soon as you can, more to unburden your conscience than anything else.</p>
<p>Personally I’d email and/or write a letter to UCSD about these things (since it’s somewhat similar to academic changes). In March or so I wrote a letter to them because I wrote a math class that was one semester long twice instead of changing the second semester for another math class that was also a semester long. I emailed to make sure they got it a while later and they said they received it. They probably won’t say anything about whether you are rescinded or not until July 15th or something but I doubt neither you nor or I will be.</p>
<p>I called and ended up leaving a message… ick, this is not helping.
Say I was to e-mail them. Which e-mail address would I use? Office of Admissions?</p>
<p>I highly doubt (and by that, I mean I’m 2000% sure) that you arent going to lose your spot for these mistakes.</p>
<p>1- The grade mistake would only really have mattered if you reported a higher grade, not a lower one. The fact that the grade was a higher one just means that your chance of having gotten in would have been slightly higher due to the higher GPA.</p>
<p>2- If you take an extra course, its the same thing, I dont think it’ll really matter at all. In fact, this may look better for on your part.</p>