<p>Let's say you get accepted early action (!), and you send in your midyear report a month later. Let's also say you're taking 7 senior year classes this year and your midyear report shows you got A+'s in all of these courses... except two (let's just say these two classes go by the names of AP Calc BC and Physics... and you have below an A- in those classes...)... Would that honestly set ground for rescinding of your application? I hear so many different things but so far have never heard of it actually happening.</p>
<p>After being accepted in the SCEA or RD round, you would have to go from a majority of A+('s) to mostly D’s and C’s to be possibly rescinded. Going from A+('s) to A-('s) has no effect. Ditto with going from A+('s) to B+('s).</p>
<p>wow, sorry to butt in here, but is rescinding really that severe? From an A+ to an A-???</p>
<p>No…as gibby said…</p>
<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/yale-university/965545-does-mean-im-screwed-2.html[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/yale-university/965545-does-mean-im-screwed-2.html</a></p>
<p>It appears that students got warnings when there were too many Bs.</p>
<p>Do you even have to send your mid-year report if you are accepted EA, or just your final transcript? (Certainly if you are deferred you have to send it.)</p>
<p>The mid-year report is part of the applications process, even for accepted SCEA students. Your guidance counselor MUST send the report, if they don’t, Yale will call them asking for it.</p>
<p>Sorry to go off topic (I’m experiencing technical problems with starting a new thread)
Does Yale still consider you for SCEA if you write your SAT on 01 December?</p>
<p>I have contacted the admissions office to inform them of my difficult situation which resulted in an inability to write in November. And I am yet to get a reply.</p>
<p>This is very stressful as I fear that if SCEA applications aren’t complete then they tossed away, instead of being added to RD.</p>
<p>Please help, any advise will be much appreciated.</p>
<p>Thank you in advance</p>
<p>Sorry you are having problems, but please stop asking the same question on different threads.</p>
<p>^^ See: [SAT</a> Score Availability - SAT Score Delivery Calendar](<a href=“The SAT – SAT Suite | College Board”>Getting SAT Scores – SAT Suite of Assessments | College Board)</p>
<p>Yale will announce SCEA acceptances before the December SAT test results are available to colleges on December 20th. So, no Yale will NOT consider you for SCEA with a December SAT.</p>
<p>Also see: [Standardized</a> Testing for Freshman Applicants | Yale College Admissions](<a href=“http://admissions.yale.edu/standardized-testing]Standardized”>Standardized Testing Requirements & Policies | Yale College Undergraduate Admissions)</p>
<p>The last possible test dates are</p>
<h2>Single-Choice Early Action</h2>
<p>for SAT: November<br>
for ACT: October<br>
for TOEFL: November 5</p>
<h2>Regular Decision</h2>
<p>for SAT: January
for ACT: February
for TOEFL: January</p>
<p>BTW: Your SCEA application will not be discarded, it will be placed in the RD pool.</p>
<p>Okay so the common answer is that one or two B+'s is okay. But how about lower than a B+? I know it’s frowned upon, but as long as you manage to keep most of your grades above an A or so, would a C+ or B- really matter that much?</p>
<p>If you are starting to talk about C’s, I guess you are having a very bad case of senioritis.</p>
<p>Based upon oldfort’s link, a couple of B’s would be okay, lots of them would not. A C+ might get you a letter or phone call. See: [Finishing</a> Strong: Colleges Can Revoke Admission Offers](<a href=“http://www.nacacnet.org/studentinfo/articles/Pages/FinishingStrong.aspx]Finishing”>http://www.nacacnet.org/studentinfo/articles/Pages/FinishingStrong.aspx)</p>