pass/no pass

<p>how to i switch a class from graded to pass/no pass?
thanks!</p>

<p>scratch that i figured it out</p>

<p>I think the deadline already passed just fyi...</p>

<p>Nm, you can still do it but you have to petition and they charge you $20 (might be forced to do that myself... I am stupid stupid stupid for taking a south campus class...)</p>

<p>i think the petition/20 is only to drop a class. i dont think u can do that to make it pass/no pass. right?</p>

<p>I don't know how the exact procedure works, but here's what it said on the registrar's website (<a href="http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/soc/enroll.htm):%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.registrar.ucla.edu/soc/enroll.htm):&lt;/a> </p>

<p>Undergraduate students changing the grading basis through URSA of an optionally graded course during weeks three through six are assessed a $5 per course fee. Changes after the end of sixth week require a petition; if approved, students are assessed a $5 per course fee plus a $15 per course penalty fee. See “Changing Grading Basis” below for more detailed information.</p>

<p>Not sure how you go about getting a petition though... if anyone happens to know, though, please enlighten me... I think I just bombed a midterm so I really, REALLY want to change to P/NP if it's at all possible</p>

<p>yeah i pretty much screwed my gpa with stat so i really need to switch to pass/no pass.</p>

<p>You might already know this by now, but just fyi... you can get a petition from one of those Ask Counseling people who just sit randomly in front of Powell. They make it sound really intimidating though... it says that "these petitions are rarely approved" or something like that... so we might be screwed</p>

<p>i just freaking bombed a midterm...so badly im not surei can even pass..how bad would the fail look?</p>

<p>im worried that i might fail a class too but im not so much worried about it being a failure as much as it making my gpa drop to where i get academic probation</p>

<p>Okay, anyone here who's good at math, help! I will be eternally grateful!</p>

<p>I got a 34/40 on my first midterm (overall median was a 28 with 148 people in the class), and on the second midterm I screwed up and got a 24/40 (median was 21, 150 people in the class). Not sure if that's enough info to figure this out, but if it is, what score would I need to get on the last exam to get at least a B+ in the class? (We don't get scores for each test; instead at the end of the course, the top 20% gets A's, the next 30% get B's, and the next 40% get C's)</p>

<p>Scratch that, I realized it's not possible to figure out what score I would need... but using my veerrrry poor math skills I figured out that I would need to be in the top 10% of the class on the last test to secure an A-/B+. Does that sound right?</p>