Just for fun- How badly does one have to do to get their acceptance rescinded?

<p>It's the night before a math test, and I was thinking- If I end up with 2 C's this semester and several B's, would WashU feel compelled to rescind my ED acceptance? </p>

<p>I'm (slightly) embarrassed to admit that I have gotten a C as a final grade before and maaaany B's, but never 2 C's in a semester. Last semester my grades dipped slightly (more B's than usual) but senioritis is in full mode this semester. Currently I probably have two F's and a C in my classes, but those are grades that consist of only a few quizzes so far.</p>

<p>By the way, integrals suck.
Thanks for the answers</p>

<p>Well the B’s are nearly a non-issue. Most schools recognize senioritis, but do not promote or encourage it. A C can be forgiven; however, multiple C’s will not look good at all and gives WashU a plausible reason to have your admittance rescinded.</p>

<p>If you get all B’s you should be fine. I’d say work to get those C’s to B’s and from then on relax.</p>

<p>“…from then on relax.”</p>

<p>Not exactly. They can still rescind you if your final grades drop.
Try and stay focused as best you can.</p>

<p>“I probably have two F’s and a C in my classes, bu”</p>

<p>They will definately drop you if you do not graduate…can you graduate with two F’s?</p>

<p>what i meant was those are my grades now, which is only a month into the semester and are highly doubtful to be my final grades. What i’m worried about is potentially 1 or 2 C’s</p>

<p>Relax as in, maintain B’s. And your school should only send in semester grades. So if you are going to have one or two C’s, are they half-semester or full-semester? If they were half-semester, you could potentially bring the overall semester grade up to a solid B.</p>

<p>At least, that’s how my school operates. Not necessarily yours, just a suggestion.</p>

<p>I was wondering the same thing, so thanks for the responses!
(and I agree with you about integrals! They do suck.)</p>

<p>How does WashU feel about auditing a class second semester senior year after an ED acceptance?</p>