<p>Does McGill require a mid-year grade report?</p>
<p>Bump...and, just to let you know, I thought your user name was hornied dreams, at first...</p>
<p>Gross...I couldn't think of anything else when I chose this name; I have no idea where it came from. I signed up for cc at one point with another username but I don't remember the password.</p>
<p>Yes, I think they do want one. Just ask your school to send them your mid-term report.</p>
<p>Update--they require a transcript.</p>
<p>My mid-year report won't be ready until Feb 6 and according to Minerva, my application is "Ready for Review". I sent in my first quarter grades for this year (my school does official semester grades and sends out quarter grades more for the purpose of progress reports than anything official). Should I bother sending out my mid-year report? Of course this question will answer itself if I get an admission decision before Feb 6. (Highly unlikely, but I can be optimistic... ^_^)
What do you guys think?</p>
<p>how much weight do they put on mid year reports anways????
I have my midterms this week and im not expecting to do so good...</p>
<p>a lot of weight.
i mean, thats the way they judge your grade 12 marks.</p>
<p>even for americans?</p>
<p>there is an individual on the forums who already received his decision even before he had a chance to send his mid-year report.</p>
<p>anybody know the deal with that?</p>
<p>I have "further review required" because we just finished out first semester this week, so grades don't go out until next week. I heard that if the school really likes your stats aka you're perfect for the school they'll admit you even if you don't have your mid-yr in. However, if you get "Further Review Required" the school is limbo and likes your application but wants to see whether or not your senior year grades are up-to-par with your previous year grades. So I guess FRR is actually a good sign because you haven't been rejected yet!</p>
<p>Also, first semester senior year grades are REALLY important since it's your most recent work so they want to see what you can do now, not what you did before. I guess it has something to do with senioritis?</p>