I am currently a student at rutgers undergrad student in my sophomore year. I failed most of my classes in all 3 terms I have taken so far. I’m looking to transfer to a college in Canada, is it still possible for me to do that.
“College” in Canada is a community college. With a bottom of the barrel GPA I doubt if even the least selective Canadian university would accept you.
You need to deal with the reasons that resulted in your failure at Rutgers before you proceed any further anywhere.
I agree with @TomSrOfBoston, in that you are going to have to get that GPA up to transfer anywhere. Three failed terms indicates you have issues with university-level coursework and/or balancing your academics with university life.
Canadian schools will have the same level of expected academic requirements. You will be expected to perform well. All schools request prior transcripts.
You may want to return to your country to polish up on some of those skills.
Thank you, I appreciate all the advice. What if I am unable to return to the country for another semester? What if I leave Rutgers and go to a community college for one semester, this will give me a new GPA.
What is your country of citizenship?
You might not get permission to stay in the US on your visa.
One semester at a CC won’t change your GPA significantly to an acceptable GPA for transfer, and, if you need financial aid, you wont get any financial aid as a transfer to any school.
Why did you fail most of your classes at Rutgers?
Why do you want to attend university?
I think I may have misinterpreted this question:
If you are asking whether attending a CC will erase or omit your current GPA, then:
Short answer: No
You can’t start over again. It’s cumulative.
You need to provide all transcripts to any university where you hope to attend.
If you choose to omit any previous schoolwork, and are not honest with your paperwork, you run the risk of being rejected from all schools and being deported.
There is a clearinghouse that the universities use to track your educational information.
You apply: they check. You lie: you’re gone.