<p>Last semester I received a B for one of my classes due to a computational error. I notified the professor shortly after finishing the final, about one or two days, and she responded that I did deserve an A but she had already submitted the final grades. She mentioned that she would use a grade change form to fix the problem. About two months later, after not seeing a change, I emailed her again. She did not respond. About two months after that I emailed her yet again and still no response. I know she is still teaching a course, so I think she may just be ignoring my emails. What should I do? Is it too late now to change my grade? </p>
<p>No one here can answer this. Check with your college on grade change policies. Email the professor again, and try to go to their office to talk to them in person (if they’re still teaching, they may have office hours that you can check somewhere). Check with your adviser about what you can do in this situation.</p>
<p>Alright, I will see what I can do, thank you for your response. </p>
<p>Print out the email from the prof stating that she was going to change the grade and bring it to you when you meet with your advisor.</p>
<p>A similar situation happened to me. I got an A on every paper and didn’t score lower than a B on any exam. The professor had an extra credit opportunity where if you wrote a five page research paper you were guaranteed a letter grade increase. To secure an A, I wrote the paper. Basically when grades came out I was shocked that I had a B and not an A. I emailed him and he said that he never received one of my papers. I sent him a copy of the paper with the grade on it and he said he would change my grade when we got back to school in the spring. I never received that grade change. It’s a super frustrating and unfair situation to be in. Although I can’t offer you real advice, I can sympathize with you because it sucks not getting the grade you deserve. Hopefully you’re able to get it all sorted out! </p>
<p>It’s possible that the prof is just busy and not sure what to do, rather than actively ignoring you. But look up your school’s grade change policy and try talking to some one else like an advisor.</p>