Summer enrollment?

<p>Hey guys, I just read in another thread that Umich has summer admissions... I'm OOS right now but I still have a good shot at Umich. I have a 31 Act, 3.85 gpa, and have a very good EC. However how much does summer admit to Umich help admissions. I don't mind if I have to miss summer, infact I would actually prefer it. Also would applying for a summer term help my chances of preadmit into Ross? This isn't such a big deal because I can just app to Ross after 1 year. Thanks for the help guys and sorry about bad grammar I'm on my iphone</p>

<p>What happened to UVA or bust? ;-)</p>

<p>lol, I got “busted” by people on the UVA forum because I was over zealous. Well they told me to find some good backups that I can go to because I’ll probably be rejected. (not saying that Umich is going to be easier to get into). But if going during the summer will help my chances I would be more than happy to give up my summer.</p>

<p>If anyone knows this please post.</p>

<p>IMO Michigan is every bit as good as UVA, if not better. You will not be sacrificing anything if you get admitted, except a milder winter. In terms of academics, Michigan has NO weaknesses. If you decide to major in something other than business, you will be in a top 5-20 program in almost anything you could desire. Btw, Ross is just as good as McIntire for business.</p>

<p>yea rjk, I’m more of southern guy but I do like Umich. Also do you know if applying for a summer session helps? Also how hard is it to app to ross after 1 year?</p>

<p>If you can’t get the answers you’re looking for here, try the “business majors” section here on CC in the discussion threads. It is summer and a lot of current students are not online here right now.</p>

<p>I don’t think you can apply to summer term without first applying for regular admission. Michigan will review your application, and if you fall into the category of “good enough for Michigan but maybe not as strong as other candidates”, they may offer summer admission as an option. This way, you have one semester to get adjusted to college classes without much penalty. </p>

<p>I know a person who was below average by Michigan standards but had a recommendation from Gov. Granholm who was admitted this way. I think this is pretty rare, so I wouldn’t count on it getting you in.</p>

<p>Getting into Ross after your first year is not too difficult. A 3.6 GPA in your first year gives you a good shot. To put things into perspective, Ross accepts about 40% of LSA applicants.</p>