<p>just making sure, but they dont want any senior grade reports like a mid year report?</p>
<p>I don't think there is such a thing as a mid year report at UCs...I hear they ask for your transcripts after you've been accepted</p>
<p>oh haha thats what i meant</p>
<p>i'm really out of it</p>
<p>so they want an official transcript with our senior grades on there sent to them?
(the first semester of course)</p>
<p>but I always thought the GPA they calculated for admissions included 12th grade...I think schools automatically send the report as soon as the semester ends....</p>
<p>well for my school, the students have to pay money everytime they send the scores and we have to request it really early. </p>
<p>so is it required?</p>
<p>No
........</p>
<p>The only grades they see are the ones you typed into the boxes. Then they admit you. Then you send a transcript. Then they rescind you if it sucks.</p>
<p>I still don't understand. We didn't put grades for senior year on the application. yet we are not going to send our application in until after we are admitted. So if UC doesn't look at freshman grades or senior grades until after a person is admitted, they only look 10-11?:confused:</p>
<p>In short, yes.</p>
<p>what????????????????????????????:eek:</p>
<p>then how do they know whether you school is legitimate as in offerings of AP classes and such? My school doesn't offer AP classes to anyone but seniors and we only have 5 AP classes. So they won't know all that right?</p>
<p>They look at your senior class load. The higher/more rigorous the load, the more competitive you'll be in the admissions.</p>
<p>The UCs are not completely clueless about your high school. Every year, the California high schools submit their course offering and UC evaluates them as UC-approved and/or an honor/AP class. As long as they know which high school you go to, they know what they offer at your school. If you have taken 4 our of the 5 AP courses, they will see you have taken a rigorous coursework.</p>
<p>You do not need to worry about sending mid-year reports. Each UC gets too many applicants (UCLA supposedly got somewhere between 40,000 - 50,000 applications last year) to review each persons mid-year reporsts. Compare that to a private school. For example, Georgetown only receives 15,000-18,000 applications, considerably less than UCLA; hence, Georgetown does have the time to read the mid-year reports.</p>
<p>So, RELAX. You're application is in; if you've done well in high school and know that you've given you're best, you know you will not have anything to worry about. If the UCs need anything, they'll let you know (or go the UC application status website). If worse comes to worse (that is, you're rejected), you can always appeal the decision.</p>
<p>yes, but I'm not from CA, in fact the east coast. But thanks:)</p>