Sending transcript

<p>hey guys is it ok if i send my transcript before nov 1. my councler never told me anything about sending transcripts and i just found out is it ok if you still send by nov 1 and they recieve it later. i will probably be sending my transcript to all schools oct 31 by mail or electronically. please tell me if the schools i am sending to accept mail or electronically and that if i can still make the deadline with my transcript sent?</p>

<p>please some 1 tell me</p>

<p>I don’t understand the question (which may be why you’re getting no answers).</p>

<ol>
<li> How are you sending your own transcripts? Your school is supposed to do that. (They send it when they send the Secondary School Report, which includes a letter from your guidance counselor or another administrator.)</li>
<li> You need to request that your school send your transcript somewhat before you need it to arrive, because people in the office have other tasks to do, besides just sending your transcript.</li>
<li> If you have applications due November 1, and you haven’t yet had transcripts sent, go talk to somebody before school on Monday. You need them sent ASAP. Most colleges and universities probably won’t fault you if the information from your school doesn’t arrive by the deadline, but they will start reviewing applicants’ files soon, and you need yours to be complete. And it’s going to take a while before your file is complete (see #2).</li>
</ol>

<p>ya i meant school sending them. idk man i can’t talk to anyone from my school till monday. btw dont most schools do it electronically or faxed so they get them instantly? out of these schools which do that?</p>

<p>wisconsin
u of i
purdue
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Michigan State University
Texas A&M University
penn state
texas austin
georgia tech</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>I would be astonished if any of the major universities on your list didn’t accept electronic submissions of school records, but I don’t intend to go Googling to find out for you. But you are more likely to have an issue on the sender end, with getting your high school to treat this as an urgent problem, than on the recipient end, with a college or university wanting to accept the transcripts. </p>

<p>Colleges want you to apply. They want your application fee. If they like you, they want to accept you. If they don’t want you, they still like you to apply because rejecting students makes them look more selective. So if your school-sent documents come a little after the deadline, they’ll cut you some slack.</p>

<p>But you still need to take action at your high school Monday morning because there’s no guarantee that the people at school will view your situation as their emergency. You need to realize that it may take time for the wheels to turn.</p>