Revoking Admission for Low Grades after Acceptance?

<p>Does Northeastern revoke admission for lower grades after your accepted?
Is there a limit?
Have they done it a lot?</p>

<p>or are they not very strict on it.</p>

<p>I know I'm just worrying too much as normal but I slacked off during my third quarter and got two low C's which I regret and now I know the first things my parents will say when they find out about them is that I'm gonna get my admission revoked. They wouldn't tuch my scholarship would they?</p>

<p>someone please reply i'm in like the same exact position as this kid</p>

<p>Northeastern's like most colleges; it's possible, but rather unlikely unless you actually fail a class (and even then they may just ask "what's going on?")</p>

<p>i highly doubt it for Cs. i think revoking admission is only for like multiple Ds or an F. don't worry.</p>

<p>You should bring it back up for fourth quarter as much as possible, because it is your final high school transcript and you never know, you might apply for something that wants to see your high school grades. </p>

<p>I wouldn't worry, my brother got terrible grades (even Ds, I believe) senior year, but Northeastern didn't do anything about it.
He did have a lot of trouble once he was a freshman, because of his tendency to slack off, though.</p>

<p>YA I have the same question.
I got into NEU (somehow) my gpa was very low,
I had a D+ last year in french :/ dropped ap chem.
This year i had mostly b's with one or 2 c's.
I had 800 on all the sat maths that i took (2c and normal).
Right now, I have a B+ in Calc and Physics AP, a C + in stats ap, a C- in english, and a B- in psych.
For me, as an individual, those are not very different from grades i got throughout highschool (yes i regret it) but will this be enough to get me revoked even tho I got accepted with 40% tuition off?</p>

<p>You're all fine. You'd have to REALLY flunk. I got a D in one of my classes 2nd semester senior year (whoops!) and nothing happened.</p>

<p>Depending on your scholarship, they could change that. Your scholarship is determined by rank, and if you rank changes dramatically senior year, then they could lower your scholarship and increase another person's.</p>

<p>^^^I don't know about you guys, but at my high school, your rank is frozen the January of your senior year.</p>

<p>They don't give your scholarship according to the rank in your high school... That is only controlled by who is in your school. They rank you according to the incoming class applicants. Hence, the top 10% become honors. If your grades plummet and you are no longer in a range that gets you a scholarship, then they will take it away.</p>

<p>I have the exact same question but regarding Bentley, which I’ve heard is around the same level as Northeastern. My grades have actually not dropped very much, but my school has me under this contract that if my grades are lower than a C in AP Calc then they remove you from the class and notify your universities. I have a 72.1 (C-) and grades are already handed in, so theres a possibility they will notify Bentley. Could my acceptance be revoked? :s I’m really worried cause i’m pretty set on going to bentley.</p>

<p>Deepak</p>

<p>What if… let’s say, you were admitted into honors. If your grades dropped by A LOTTT and I mean from an IB predicted 42 to an actual mark of 28 or so, would they take you out of honors? I’m suffering from really really bad senioritis at the moment, and all of my teachers dropped my final predicted … plus I can’t pull up my exam marks in the 2 weeks remaining that we have before exams… :frowning: feeling stuck.</p>

<p>IB grades don’t matter to Northeastern except for transfer credit.</p>

<p>I’m so glad yo LOL
I was scared I’d lose scholarship.
My rank’s like 170 out of 270. Horrible ranking XD
and I got a C in english, and iono about now, but my grades have dropped.
I guess I won’t have to worry tho. WOOT
Why the **** have i been trying so hard then XD</p>

<p>Your gpa does matter though, but only if it goes down significantly.</p>

<p>am i allowed to bring this up after four years?</p>

<p>Bring up what? We already answered this question, didn’t we?</p>