<p>hey guys, if I took a class at one ccc and recieved a substandard grade ( D) and then retook it at anothe ccc and got a (B) then retook it at the first ccc ( the one i recieved the (D) at, and recieved an (F) how do UC's calculate that when applying? do they take the average? how does it work? If someone could answer this that would be great! Dont ask me how this all happend either, lots of problems came up and i couldnt go to my class, and since it was a summer class i was already passed the drop date...</p>
<p>question sounds familiar. :)</p>
<p>haha yeah, never got an answer last time. Does anyone even have an idea of what might be done?</p>
<p>highest grade counts for your UC gpa.</p>
<p>hello. I'm techniquelly a college junior undergraduate at a JC now (UGGGGGH!)..still finishing up my general education courses and man, I'm dreading it. Well I think of applying to a state school like San Francisco State University for the Fall 2006 (senior standing by then) as a biology major and finish my undergraduate studies for my B.S. in Biology. Then, I thought to look into UCSF School of Pharmacy to begin my graduate studies to become a PharmD. My question is if I were to transfer to SFSU and finish my undergraduate studies there, would I be able to transfer to a UC school to begin my graduate studies if I didn't decide to apply to UCSF, instead? Thanks!</p>
<p>Malishka is that right? I heard that if you initially received a C in the class and attempted to retake the course to get a better grade that it wouldn't replace the C. Also, this would look bad to UC admissions because they look at it as your main concern is to receive a high GPA rather than to obtain knowledge.</p>
<p>ok, when i said highest grade counts, i mean the one that your school lets you replace,</p>
<p>as far as i know , no school will let you replcae or retake a class after recieveing a C in it. </p>
<p>so any D or F replaced by any higher grade counts, however if you received a C and then for soem reason were allowed to take it again and got an A , that C would count.</p>