<p>I have had a clean disciplinary record, except for an incident in March in which I was given three days of in-school suspension for bypassing my school internet filter. Will this go on my final transcript, and will stanford rescind me for this? Thanks (I was accepted EA, so they don't know about my suspension yet, if in-school suspension even counts as suspension). Thanks.</p>
<p>I don’t think disciplinary remarks go on transcripts. I think their kept in a separate file. Why don’t you ask your GC to ease your mind?</p>
<p>Bypassing an internet filter is a much lesser offense than cheating or stealing/accessing sensitive information. Were you surfing porn, accessing Facebook, or doing something constructive? :D</p>
<p>I can’t say I know how this will be perceived by the university but here’s some relevant info.:
-Stanford values freedom of information/learning and does not censor the internet like many high schools do.
-Stanford also appreciates the white-hat hacker culture that many of its CS alumni live and breathe.
-While Stanford does care about whether you follow school policies, the rules are most strict when they pertain to academic honesty. Sometimes, the bending/breaking of rules is forgivable and even supported if the action has a greater purpose and doesn’t violate academic honesty.
-For Stanford students, violations of internet usage policies (DMCA violations, exploiting security loopholes) are generally met with an initial warning, and discontinuation of certain internet access privileges occur upon a subsequent violation.</p>
<p>I’d ask myself how does this particular violation translate into anything that Stanford would deem problematic once you enrolled - doesn’t seem like it does.</p>
<p>They might rescind your acceptance for thinking recission is a word, though.</p>
<p>… consult a dictionary Francaisalamatt</p>