<p>If I got suspended, will my admission offer be rescinded? What if I submit them a letter explaining the circumstances, will they let me just stay with academic probation?</p>
<p>One of my friends accepted to Cornell was suspended for 5 days and he's still going.</p>
<p>thanks for the info. I was also suspended for 5 days.</p>
<p>Any more instances?
Maybe someone was suspended and then rejected from Cornell?</p>
<p>ROFL what did u do? lol i wanna know</p>
<p>I dont think I should be talking about it, especially here. Moreover, my mom talked to school administration and they said it wont go on transcript. I think that's bull***** though</p>
<p>well it's good that it won't go on your transcript :)
E</p>
<p>This kid in my school got suspended for a week for mooning the cafeteria and goes to Columbia</p>
<p>Hmmm... i guess i'm ok so far.. </p>
<p>well how about if you won't graduate? will your college talk to you at all? Like will they offer you to get GED or to make up work somehow or anything like that or will they simply deny you admission?</p>
<p>If you don't graduate, I'd say you're pretty screwed in terms of college.</p>
<p>I don't think a suspension would be a big deal, as long as you didn't do anything absolutely terrible.</p>
<p>If you don't graduate, I think that is a problem.</p>
<p>I hope you're not in that situation?</p>
<p>what if u just got bad grades in 3 courses? Not failing, but bad......like a C or something</p>
<p>Nono... just looking at possible scenarios.. Right now I'm just suspended but
1) there's some teachers in school that are curretly working on getting me expelled
and 2) I had so many more plans..i'd hate to give them up cause if i get in trouble again, i'm pretty much fuc*ed
Right now I'm looking at the option of transferring to another school and gettting diploma from there</p>
<p>Wow...u must've done some sick prank... must've been hardcore bro.</p>
<p>Give up on high school. If you're the kind of kid who wants to go to a really challenging school, HS is generally a waste of your time to begin with unless you are going somewhere like Choate or Andover. Although I had no disciplinary issues, by junior year I was fed up with how easy all of my classes were and enrolled for my senior year as a freshman at a 4-year state university, then transferred to a top-20 LAC. I think it may be rare that 4-year schools admit HS students full-time, but it's really common for HS seniors to enroll full-time in a community college and graduate from their HS at the end of the year, for various reasons including disciplinary problems. If you do well, it will look better on your college apps than any number of AP or IB classes you can take. What's more, whatever heinous thing you did will become old news and you'll be able to start with a clean slate, considering that nobody will even know about it.</p>
<p>w01f,
usually, if ur academically well off, teacher's wouldn't wanna spoil ur future by putting this in ur transcript.</p>
<p>Schools don't put disciplinary problems on transcripts, but all applications ask if you've been suspended or expelled, and a guidance counselor generally has to send in some sort of form on which they may have to mention whatever he did, as well. If what he did is so bad that some teachers are trying to expel him, his teachers may not want to spoil his future but they may also have difficulty writing him good recommendations with a clean conscience. And refusing to write a good recommendation for him to an Ivy League school (hate to put it that way, but let's talk high school mentality about college) will not exactly spoil his future. So long as he has a reputation at his school I predict trouble with recs, which is why I suggest finishing at a community college.</p>
<p>He's already in...he doesn't need that stuff...</p>
<p>Ohhh... well then I figure if you're in you're in.</p>
<p>Say some guy, lets call him Frank, was asking this same question. What did you....no no no, Frank do to ask this question? lol</p>
<p>Look, you've come this far.. and you must have done well if you have an acceptance to Cornell.</p>
<p>Why would you stop now? Who cares if some teachers have some personal mission against you? You only have a little over a month left. I mean, if you don't do anything that's going to get you into any more trouble, you should be fine. YOu don't have to deal with it for much longer, and you'll be glad you stuck with it. </p>
<p>I have no idea what context this entire situation is in, but don't let a bad situation get worse. Just hang in there for a little longer...</p>
<p>You're already into a great college, but in order to get here you need to finish up the year. Your grades don't even count unless you're failing, so just show up to school and don't get in any more trouble and you're fine. I don't see how that's difficult...don't throw everything away over one snare.</p>