<p>I have a physic midterm on wed and another 2 on mon (which I spend a lot of time on). I have a NST11 exam on tue which I decided to take it pass/ no pass. My question is that should I study NST on mon after my two MT or spend the time on physcis (which I really need) and get no pass on NST? I did poor on the first NST exam and I never did go to lecture.</p>
<p>keep faith and pass.</p>
<p>NP will: give you no units.</p>
<p>… that’s about it.</p>
<p>If you get NP on 12 or more units over the course of your college career, they might bar you from taking any other classes P/NP. But other than losing the units, that’s the worst that can happen.</p>
<p>But there’s still time left in the semester. If you’re worried about it, go to the professor (or GSI) now.</p>
<p>Also, some Grad schools count a NP as an F</p>
<p>Ah, that’s right: LSDAS calculates an NP as an F. If you’re applying to law school, don’t get an NP. <_<</p>
<p>what about med schools.</p>
<p>i guess I should just study, but the material is soooooooooo boring, omg, sorry…</p>
<p>I don’t think AMCAS figures it that way.</p>
<p>“Note that semester hours for courses with an AMCAS letter grade (e.g., A, A-, B+, etc.) are included in normal GPA
calculations. Supplemental hours, however, are only for courses with an AMCAS grade of
? G (used for Advanced Placement credit),
? L (used for CLEP credit),
? N (used for Pass/Fail - Fail credit), or
? P (used for Pass/Fail - Pass credit)
These are reported to medical schools as a total amount (i.e., 25 hours of Supplemental Credit Hours) and are not
included in normal GPA calculations.”</p>
<p>So it won’t show up and drag down your AMCAS GPA, but any failing mark is cause for question to an admissions committee so expect to have to explain.</p>