<p>no, they are giving you the opportunity to add to the case for admission, but for some, grades would not be available. As they state, failure to reply does not jeopardize your admission, but every additional positive thing that was submitted improves your odds. Even if grades had been available but you chose not to submit them, it wouldn’t hurt your situation compared to not getting a supplement. It is all upside.</p>
<p>ok thanks, I just hope they went back to take a look because they were good grades, and do you know if they do refer back if you said you are waiting on them?</p>
<p>If they already moved you into the acceptance pile, they wouldn’t likely go back and check the grades, but for anyone still in play, as they try to complete their decisions I would imagine they would look at anything that came in. It is what I would do if I were an admissions person trying to select the best applicants</p>
<p>Is there anybody on here who got the supplemental that has been receiving emails from Berkeley lately?? Such as open house info, and other contact/info from Berkeley???</p>
<p>No emails. Are you getting emails from them?</p>
<p>I have rec’d the LASA overnite stay email.</p>
<p>I put my heart into the supplement. Im so scared for tommorow</p>
<p>^–im sure a lot of us did. Goodluck to Everyone!</p>
<p>Do most augmented review kids get spring admission?</p>
<p>I should have tried harder on the supplements ):</p>
<p>The spring vs fall offer depends a lot on why they asked for the supplement and where you fit on their balance between admit and reject. </p>
<p>Talent related applicants seem to be mostly fall offers. It appears that they pick applicants for talent supplements when they believe that something in the application makes this a very desirable person to have in the incoming class, thus the supplement is to confirm or deny the impression they got. If it confirms what they suspected, probably a quick ‘yes’ decision. </p>
<p>Borderline supplement applicants come out both ways - after all, this process is about a relatively big pile of applicants to sort between to fill up the small number of remaining spots, after all the definite yes applicants are offered admission. As they divide up the applicants, they end up with a pile of Fall offers, a pile of Spring offers, and a pile of no decisions. </p>
<p>However, you will see later today that some get a spring offer with no borderline supplement request and some get a fall admission offer after filling out a borderline supplement - in other words, the borderline supplement people are not automatically spring.</p>
<p>After they take all the supplement request applicants and the much bigger pool of easy decision applicants, they combine and rank them again, with Fall offers going to as many people as they can to fit the available space on campus next Fall, the remaining ones offered a Spring slot based on expected additional space due to graduations etc.</p>
<p>got it and got rejected! LOL</p>
<p>supplement and rejection :(</p>
<p>Got it accepted</p>
<p>got it, accepted</p>
<p>got the borderline supplement
accepted into spring 2013.</p>
<p>talent, admitted fall!</p>
<p>borderline. accepted fall!</p>
<p>talent supplement, admitted to fall 2016!! TRY HARD ON YOUR SUPPLEMENTS FUTURE APPLICANTS!!! IT HELPS A LOT!!!</p>
<p>for future reference I just want to say this supplement was life changing. After being rejected from UCLA, waitlisted to UCSD, I never felt more dissapointed in myself ever before. This supplement is a life changing opportunity which I wish all of you in the future will take full advantage of. Congratulations to everyone who got in (fall or spring) and good luck to everyone that gets it!</p>