<p>Can you SIR a different one even after its deadline?
This year SIR is due June 1st. My semester ends June 5th and probably not until June 10th until I get all my grades. If I SIR a UC campus, but get revoked, what's then?</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>Can you SIR a different one even after its deadline?
This year SIR is due June 1st. My semester ends June 5th and probably not until June 10th until I get all my grades. If I SIR a UC campus, but get revoked, what's then?</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>Just to be clear, SIR = Statement of Intent to Register</p>
<p>Then you’re probably SOL. You aren’t going to find out you are revoked until late in the summer. Perhaps earlier if you don’t pass a class (that sounds like your worry) and then call the UC where you submitted the SIR to ask if they will revoke you. Once the SIR deadline has passed you can call other UCs and beg them to accept a late SIR, but there is no guarantee they will. And if its weeks after the deadline then the answer is probably a firm no, but I’m just guessing on that. </p>
<p>In addition to what mike Mac said - if you get revoked from the school that you submitted the SIR another school would likely have the same problem accepting you as the school that revoked you. If you feel there is a chance that you are going to get a grade that would cause you to be revoked at one school and not another submitt sir to school where you won’t get revoked.<br>
My suggestion is talk to your professor now. Find out what you need and can do to get the grade you need. Have a second talk at the end of May. You can make a decision where to SIR at that time. Good Luck</p>
<p>Just wondering, whats stopping a person from sending an SIR to more than one school? Sure, you’ll lose a deposit, but besides that, isn’t it a viable solution?</p>
<p>Freetofly: UCs are all in the same system. They talk. And they’ll find out pretty quickly. And from what I remember, they’ll send you angry emails telling you to choose one.</p>
<p>As for what to do… dunno. You should know your terms and conditions by now, right? Figure out where you stand in your classes, ask your professors if you should be worried, and see where you stand. Being rescinded for grades really shouldn’t show up mid-summer as a surprise.</p>
<p>@mikemac
There is one class that I’m taking right now, which could give me my first C and bring my GPA from a 3.8 to 3.65 and I’m afraid it would be too low for admission to my intended major. On another hand, this wouldn’t be too low to another UC campus, at a different major - but I prefer to stick with my first choice since I already got accepted. I’m going to email anyway if I can withdraw this class since It’s not really a pre-req (it’s part of a 3 course physics series. This is the first one. I was told I can do all the 3 classes when I transfer).</p>
<p>Do you have an admission letter that lists conditions of admission that you must fulfill, typically something like completing previously reported in-progress courses with minimum grades and GPA?</p>
<p>Not from my understanding. It says this:</p>
<p>Maintain Academic Performance
Maintain the grade point average and complete the courses and number of units you reported in your application and in any subsequent course updates. You must be in good standing at your last institution of attendance. Also, if you attended another UC campus in regular session prior to enrollment, you must have been in good standing when you left that UC campus. Notify our office immediately of any withdrawals, incomplete grades, drop in academic performance, or other changes to your class schedule. </p>
<p>Complete Coursework Requirements
Complete the following course pattern by June 2014 with C grades or better: two (2) transferable courses in English composition; one (1) transferable course in mathematical concepts and quantitative reasoning; and four (4) transferable courses in at least two of the following subject areas: arts and humanities, social and behavioral sciences, and physical and biological sciences. </p>
<p>*** The “Coursework Requirements” was met a year+ ago, so it’s not a problem anymore.</p>
<p>Again, you must notify our office immediately of any withdrawals, incomplete grades, drop in academic performance (including 2 or more C grades, any D and/or F grades, any C grades in major preparatory courses), or other changes to your class schedule.</p>