<p>I did very well in my sophomore and freshman years of high school with a few ap classes and literally straight a grades, however, junior and senior years were very bad. I took more ap and some ib classes, but the grades are all c's and d's in core classes.</p>
<p>I got accepted to university of north carolina, but is it likely that they'll rescind my acceptance since senior year turned out just as bad as junior? </p>
<p>And in the event that this does happpen, is there any way I can convince them to give me a chance? Could i just get academic probation or something instead of being rescinded if I asked?</p>
<p>In your acceptance letter was there anything about conditional admission, or did it ask for satsfactory progress? In truth, since we don’t know the school it is hard to say. The only way to know is to contact the school or wait for them to contact you. Is this a school that does summer orientation? If so, you will be getting information and meeting with advisors.</p>
<p>You got to UNC Chapel Hill with bad junior year grades? That’s quite a feat. You will probably be rescinded for squandering your chance to redeem yourself. Hope it all turns out well for you, though.</p>
<p>What were your second semester senior year grades? Those are the grades that will determine if you’re rescinded - they already knew about the other grades when they accepted you.</p>
<p>No school will outright rescind you. They will first ask you to explain yourself and why you got such bad grades.</p>
<p>If you do get rescinded, what some people are able to do is contact the admissions office of lower-tier universities for which they are way overqualified (e.g. someone rescinded from Stanford contacts a CSU). However, since you had low grades junior year as well, this might not be an option. Community college and then transfer is always available.</p>
<p>Mizzbee, yes the acceptance letter did hint at the conditional status of my acceptance. And I didn’t receive my transcript until just after summer orientation.</p>
<p>I could offer an explanation but honestly I don’t know if I should since it’s a bit unusual and not something people usually have sympathy for (like having a job or being hospitalized or something).</p>