Received an F Senior Year in Math Analysis

<p>I received an F senior year in Math Analysis which I tried to retake the course at community college however was cancelled. Due to this, my unweighted senior year GPA went down to a 2.8 GPA. However, my senior weighted GPA is 3.0. My overall weighted GPA is over 3.0. Will U.C. Irvine automatically rescind my application if I were to get accepted? Also, what does this mean for the other U.C. colleges?</p>

<p>Thanks.</p>

<p>send them a letter that you got an F.</p>

<p>or suffer</p>

<p>I sent them an e-mail. However, due to the F, regardless of whether I sent them the letter or not, would I still be rejected or rescinded if I were to get accepted?</p>

<p>Thanks.</p>

<p>its their call.</p>

<p>its not an automatic rejection or rescindance</p>

<p>Thanks, I really appreciate your help!</p>

<p>Your chance of getting other options on this increase dramatically if you tell them now. If you wait until they rescind you, then you lose the option of possibly being able to retake the class at a CC over summer.</p>

<p>I sent them an e-mail through their application status page, however it still stated that it wasn't opened; I sent it about two weeks ago. I also sent them a mail about a month or two ago. Will that be fine?</p>

<p>Thank you!</p>

<p>You can try calling or sending them a official letter.</p>

<p>Thank you; I called them. :)</p>

<p>Well what did they say?</p>

<p>They told me that I wasn't necessarily going to have my application cancelled. I still really want to attend U.C. Irvine and that's the school that I am hoping to get into. I also applied to other U.C. colleges but Irvine is my top choice.</p>

<p>Oh, I have another question. If I received a 2.8 unweighted GPA for the first semester of my senior year due to that F in Math Analysis, would I be ineligible for every U.C. now? I have over a 3.0 weighted GPA for my senior year. My weighted GPA is over a 3.0.</p>

<p>well i think its only LA and CAL that has to be 3.0+ unweighed. The rest are 3.0+ weighed.</p>

<p>Again, I would make the point that, just because you violated the Provisional Contract, you aren't necessarily automatically "out" at UCs. While this is absolutely not a license to fail classes, the earlier you report this, the better chance you have of retaining admissions. Your admissions are jeopardized, but if you have the time like you do now, I would suggest at least trying to explore the options and tell all your UCs.</p>

<p>Thank you very much for your help! If I raise my unweighted GPA to above 3.0 the 2nd semester of my senior year, would it balance my overall GPA and still make me eligible for LA? </p>

<p>I mailed all the UC's I applied to along with e-mailing them so hopefully they'll reply to me soon. I really appreciate your help. :)</p>

<p>^That would only be fulfilling part of your contract. You've already violated it, but I would assume that violating less of it makes you all the more likely to get some second chance. The only example on the forum from last year was a guy that got a D, and subsequently was rescinded from UCSC (he appealed and didn't get in), but there are examples of schools accepting you anyways from secondary sources. LA and Cal are probably going to be stricter on it than, say, UCR, so keep that in mind too.</p>

<p>Did he send letters and emails? I got a letter from San Diego today saying that they received my letter and they would have to look at my final transcript in order to notify me what my status will be. I hope that it goes well because I really tried to take the class again but unfortunately, it was cancelled. </p>

<p>Anyway, thanks for the help.</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/university-california-santa-cruz/356865-revoke.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/university-california-santa-cruz/356865-revoke.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>That's the thread.</p>

<p>Oh, it sort of looks like I'm in the same situation as that person. I did try to take a community college class to make up for it though but wasn't able to.</p>