Should I submit my my transcript for a university level class?

<p>So over the summer I took a class at a local university. I had to miss a week and a half of the course because I had a out of country trip, and it just so happened that I missed the midterm. What happened was that the final would count for both grades, so that it would account for 80% of the grade. To make a long story short, I pulled a B in the test.</p>

<p>I'm kind of disappointed, because the class wasn't really that difficult. It was a programming class though, and also I'm pretty good at figuring the logic and all out, I'm not so good at getting the code right the first time. For the final, we had to write it down on paper, and I usually go through a ton of debugging on the computer, so yeah. I was hoping for an A but oh well. I'm not mad, that's what I got out of my effort and missed classes.</p>

<p>Anyways, I am going to apply for Stanford SCEA as well as the UC app (other stuff in January TBD). Would it be necessary to send in the transcript for the university level class? And if not, even if I got a B would it be advantageous to send it in? I mean, it's just 1 B right? I'm already extremely strong on the academic side, what with my 6 AP class As in junior year, and I'm sure they'll understand my situation here. It is an entirely different setting and structure. My thought is that the learning I gained is a much better incentive than any letter on a piece of paper is. If it's not an A, so be it. My knowledge is all the greater, and a B in a university class isn't the worst thing in the world. A B on a high school class, on the other hand.</p>

<p>You have to send the transcript. Period.</p>

<p>I thought as much.</p>

<p>But my other question still stands, getting a B is better than not taking the class, right? At the very least it shows I’m learning and being productive over the summer.</p>

<p>Who cares what is better, you can’t go back in time. It isn’t worth fretting about. It will look just fine.</p>