Transcripts and Sealed Envelope

<p>Should my academic records/transcripts be sealed by the respective school officer into the respective school sealed envelope with the school's stamp or officer's signature on it OR I can just put them all into one sealed envelope?</p>

<p>If I certify my transcripts at a earlier date and never ask the school officer to seal them in an envelope, but have come back to the school office again and asked the officer to seal them into the school envelope at a later date, is it alright?</p>

<p>If the date that my school officer certify the transcripts is different from the date that they seal it into the envelope, is it alright?</p>

<p>Is it alright for the transcripts in the envelope to be certified at different date?</p>

<p>As long as the transcripts come directly from the school, the date differences don’t matter. Besides requesting that your transcripts be sent, you can have no part in their preparation or delivery.</p>

<p>Transcripts should (a) be sent directly by the school or (b) given to you in an envelope with an offical high school seal on it for you to send. Point is that actual transcript sent is not supposed to touch your hands or otherwiuse allow for any opportunity to be altered. Not clear on what your situation is but high schools would not usually take back from you a transcript they gave you which you have had for a while and then put that particular one in a sealed envelope for sending as the official transcript. They would usually just issue a new one in a sealed envelope. Having a significant period of time between date of transcript and date of sending may, if college actually notices (possibly unlikely), raise a suspicion as to whether the transcript is offical and has been altered.</p>