<p>Johns Hopkins sent me an e-mail last week saying that my GRE scores were not received, and that my application couldn't be looked at until they had them. I had sent my scores 2 months ago, but for some reason they didn't reach the department. Grad admissions are usually made on a rolling basis, right? Meaning that my chances of acceptance are next to nothing at this point? Has anyone from an engineering discipline gotten news from JHU yet?</p>
<p>Check the GradCafe database for JHU engineering results. Grad admissions generally have an application cutoff date beyond which you may or may not be considered, depending on space.</p>
<p>They told me that the window was still open, but I’ll check out GradCafe as you suggested.</p>
<p>Do you have proof that you sent them two months ago? Did you speak or write them specifically on this point? I would assume that if you have a competitive application and this is the only part of it that is not in, and you have proof that it was an error on the part of the ETS, you would still have a chance.</p>
<p>I just checked my GRE account, and they were sent about a month and a half ago from ETS (ordered about a week before then). So I definitely have proof, and can even send them a screen shot if they need it. I told them in writing that I had sent it awhile ago, but I don’t know if that made any impact.</p>
<p>The same thing happened with me except I made sure the schools had received my GRE scores before the deadline. Call up the school and ask them if they receive their scores electronically (which most schools do). If yes, then call up ETS and get the test cycle number from them. It’s a 3-digit number that should be in the 200 range. That is all the school should need to locate your scores in their database. You shouldn’t even need to send them again.</p>
<p>Luckily this time I was told it would be ok to simply scan a copy and mail it to the department. If accepted, they want an official copy and then I’ll use your advice Loony.</p>