<p>I did not pay close attention to the Stanford application where it says to input your courses CURRENTLY ENROLLED. I assumed it was similar to the UC application, where they ask you for all your courses currently enrolled and courses planned. I had this class in mind that would I surely take in second semester. So I put that class on my Stanford application. But, it did not work out my way. A schedule conflict prevented me from taking that class. And I just realized this just recently. So I emailed Stanford, but they haven't replied. Is this a BIG mistake? I mean, they saw my Mid-Year report without that class on my transcript. But I'm still not sure if this will jeopardize my chances at Stanford.</p>
<p>Well, I hope not. My son's school keeps changing the curriculum, so what they said he'd have for spring is not what they ended up offering. (It's a very small new high school, and they don't have an established curriculum, and there is very little choice. You take what everyone else is taking, with one elective exception.)</p>
<p>I hope not too. I'm just really paranoid about college admissions. I feel like they're out there to catch your every mistake to penalize and reject you. LOL.</p>
<p>I really don't think that will matter, unless it were something like you listed that you would be taking 4 AP classes and you dropped down to regular level in all of them. I'm sure they understand about scheduling conflicts.</p>
<p>nah, it's no big deal at all. Last year I felt the same way you and a lot of seniors do about college admissions - any slight slip can ruin things. But that doesn't seem to be the case. I had to rearrange my schedule for spring semester, so it was slightly different from the one I sent Stanford. Nobody cared. My friend who got into Harvard failed Calculus spring semester. Again, nobody cared enough to make a fuss and he goes there now.</p>
<p>that's encouraging; its good to know that i'm not a loser for not understanding calculus when everyone else in my class does...:)</p>