<p>A little over a year after graduating from UC Davis I was diagnosed with depression and have since gotten treatment for it. Looking back I can see how it negatively affected my academic efforts. My GPA was below a 2.5, which means I don’t meet the basic requirements for a Grad program. When I had asked a adviser about prolonging my undergrad to raise it she told me my GPA wouldn’t matter down the line and to not bother. Now I regret listening to her. Now that I know what the problem was from before and have fixed it, is there any way to fix this so I can go to grad school somewhere?</p>
<p>Is there a way to go back and take a few classes and raise my GPA? Like part-time or online? Maybe just one or two classes at a time or during the summer? Or maybe taking classes at another university, either a UC or from a CSU and having them transferred? </p>
<p>IME transferred credits don’t count toward your GPA, nor will they accept them if you have already graduated. I’d see if I could retake some of the Cs and Ds to replace them in your calculated GPA. This would give you twice as much GPA bang as adding new credits. but again, I don’t know if they would alow you to do that since you have graduated. Can you go non-matriculated to the grad school of your choice and show you have improved? Can you contact them, perhap write an appeal as to how you’ve changed since undergrad?</p>
<p>Yes, you can go back and take a few classes to raise GPA. Look up “Open Campus”. However, Open Campus students get last priority when it comes to signing up for classes, because you’re not officially a UCD student. </p>
<p>do post bacc at a different school or take some classes that you messed up on at a college college. Do whatever it takes to show that the bad grades were just during those 4 years</p>