<p>I have slacked off during final semester and Im worrying about that my admission offer may get revoked.
Calculus: C or D
Astronomy: B or C
English 2: C</p>
<p>Last year 6 people at UIUC got their admission revoked.</p>
<p>I doubt your stats are as bad as those 6 people</p>
<p>Thank you for your reply. But those people must made less than 60 transfer units. Im a transfer student, not a freshman.</p>
<p>First of all, did they request your year end transcripts? If not you might not have anything to worry about.</p>
<p>Otherwise:
what college at UIUC did you get accepted to.</p>
<p>I would say make yourself a cumulative GPA with the worst case scenario. Add up all your previous semester GPA's and then add what you believe is lowest possible GPA you could expect this semester in with those.</p>
<p>Does this worst case scenario GPA come out to a number below your UIUC College's GPA Transfer requirement? If not you should still be ok, if so you might have it revoked. If this was high school and you got a 2.0 i'd say you should worry, but since it is college and it's often much harder, you might be ok. If you are at community college i'd say the chances of having it revoked are much higher than if you were at say Illinois State, or someplace as good as say MSU or UW Madison. I dont mean to offend you, but a GPA of 2.0 at a community college (if thats the case) is not going to suggest to them that you are ready for such a large leap academically.</p>
<p>'ya know, it's really hard to know how the admissions office works now adays. Yea, last year they revoked people who had D's and F's but who knows, they might change (and they probably will considering how freakin hard it got this year) their standards and be more strict. but like I said, it's anyone's guess. My question is why did you slack off??</p>
<p>it just a geneal behavior, you finally reached there.
I called them today and they said that ppl who got revoked because:
1. (For transfer students) completed less than 60 units.
2. Did not complete prerequisite classes prior to enrollment.</p>