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<p>+1</p>
<p>If you stay and URochester, get help for academic/study skill issues/other impediments, and get good grades from here on out, good employment and grad school don’t have to be ruled out.</p>
<p>One older relative, in fact, graduated from your very college with a GPA sometime in the late '80s just a smidgen under 3.0 because he received abysmal grades for his first 3 semesters. While it did impede his job search in comparison to peers during and right after graduation, he managed to get hired and promoted within a few topflight tech firms. </p>
<p>Along the way, one such firm PAID NEARLY EVERYTHING for him to pick up an engineering master’s at a respectable grad school. Only thing he needed to pay for was the 20% tuition for one course where he ended up with a B. Employer paid for everything else. </p>