IB predicted grades

<p>I'm a little confused as to what this is meant to imply. Do colleges seriously want me (or would it be my teachers?) to predicte what I think my IB grades will be?</p>

<p>Also, I'm taking 4 HL and 2 SL. Although I'm a diploma canidate and am in my second year of IB, I have yet to taken any IB exams. I really do think I'll do relatively well on my exams, but will colleges discredit the worth of my heavy academic workload if they have no results to support it?</p>

<p>It would be your teachers that do the predicting.</p>

<p>Do colleges weigh the predicted scores and actual scores the same?</p>

<p>No, they don't want you to predict anything...I don't know where you're getting that idea from.</p>

<p>What are you talking about predicting scores? Yeah I predict i'll get 7's on all of them... see how effective that is?</p>

<p>Yeah, I didn't put score in for tests I haven't taken.</p>

<p>My school actually requires that we submit our predicted grades when we apply, but I don't know exactly how much weight they are given.</p>

<p>disasterous -
that's my point! I don't see the purpose</p>

<p>your school will send in the predicted score
Collge will base on that to make decision, but They may also put condition there to wait for your final mark -- if not drop too much then you are ok</p>

<p>your predicted scores should just be your grades in the course.</p>

<p>In my D's school, predicted grades are based mainly on the results from final exams at the end of 11 grade. They are reported officially by the school, not students. Admissions in UK are conditional (usually) meaning that the student must obtain the overall number of points as well as in individual subjects, but in US I am not aware of any university that would extend a conditional offer. As far as I know, US admissions are unconditional (barring some catastrophic deterioration in grades or behavior).</p>